145 research outputs found

    Scoping study on natural resources and climate change in Southeast Asia with a focus on agriculture. Final report

    Get PDF
    Climate change / Natural resources / Environmental effects / Agroecology / Agricultural production / Crops / Cropping systems / Farming systems / Livestock / Fisheries / Food security / Water management / Economic aspects / Rural poverty / Policy / Nutrient management / South East Asia / Cambodia / Laos / Thailand / Vietnam / Myanmar / China / Greater Mekong Subregion / Tonle Sap / Yunnan

    Ocean acidification during the early Toarcian extinction event : evidence from boron isotopes in brachiopods

    Get PDF
    This project was funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie SkƂodowska-Curie grant agreement and project BASE-LiNE Earth (643084) and by the Slovak Research and Development Agency (APVV17-0555) and the Slovak Scientific Grant Agency (VEGA 0169/19).The loss of carbonate production during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE, ca.183 Ma) is hypothesized to have been at least partly triggered by ocean acidification linkedto magmatism from the Karoo-Ferrar large igneous province (southern Africa and Antarctica).However, the dynamics of acidification have never been directly quantified across theT-OAE. Here, we present the first record of temporal evolution of seawater pH spanning thelate Pliensbachian and early Toarcian from the Lusitanian Basin (Portugal) reconstructedon the basis of boron isotopic composition (ή11B) of brachiopod shells. ή11B declines by ~1‰across the Pliensbachian-Toarcian boundary (Pl-To) and attains the lowest values (~12.5‰)just prior to and within the T-OAE, followed by fluctuations and a moderately increasingtrend afterwards. The decline in ή11B coincides with decreasing bulk CaCO3 content, inparallel with the two-phase decline in carbonate production observed at global scales andwith changes in pCO2 derived from stomatal indices. Seawater pH had declined significantlyalready prior to the T-OAE, probably due to the repeated emissions of volcanogenicCO2. During the earliest phase of the T-OAE, pH increased for a short period, likely dueto intensified continental weathering and organic carbon burial, resulting in atmosphericCO2 drawdown. Subsequently, pH dropped again, reaching the minimum in the middle ofthe T-OAE. The early Toarcian marine extinction and carbonate collapse were thus driven,in part, by ocean acidification, similar to other Phanerozoic events caused by major CO2 emissions and warming.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Palaeoenvironmental significance of Toarcian black shales and event deposits from southern Beaujolais, France

    Get PDF
    New sedimentological, biostratigraphical and geochemical data recording the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE) are reported from a marginal marine succession in southern Beaujolais, France. The serpentinum and bifrons ammonite zones record black shales with high (1-10 wt%) total organic carbon contents (TOC) and dysoxia-tolerant benthic fauna typical of the ‘Schistes Carton' facies well documented in contemporaneous nearby basins. The base of the serpentinum ammonite zone, however, differs from coeval strata of most adjacent basinal series in that it presents several massive storm beds particularly enriched in juvenile ammonites and the dysoxia-tolerant, miniaturized gastropod Coelodiscus. This storm-dominated interval records a marked negative 5‰ carbonate and organic carbon isotope excursion being time-equivalent with that recording storm- and mass flow-deposits in sections of the Lusitanian Basin, Portugal, pointing to the existence of a major tempestite/turbidite event over tropical areas during the T-OAE. Although several explanations remain possible at present, we favour climatically induced changes in platform morphology and storm activity as the main drivers of these sedimentological features. In addition, we show that recent weathering, most probably due to infiltration of O2-rich meteoric water, resulted in the preferential removal of 12C-enriched organic carbon, dramatic TOC loss and total destruction of the lamination of the black shale sequence over most of the studied exposure. These latter observations imply that extreme caution should be applied when interpreting the palaeoenvironmental significance of sediments lacking TOC enrichment and lamination from outcrops with limited surface exposure

    Climate change, water and agriculture in the Greater Mekong subregion

    Get PDF
    The impacts of climate change on agriculture and food production in Southeast Asia will be largely mediated through water, but climate is only one driver of change. Water resources in the region will be shaped by a complex mixture of social, economic and environmental factors. This report reviews the current status and trends in water management in the Greater Mekong Subregion; assesses likely impacts of climate change on water resources to 2050; examines water management strategies in the context of climate and other changes; and identifies priority actions for governments and communities to improve resilience of the water sector and safeguard food production
    • 

    corecore