29 research outputs found

    Holocene lake sediment core sequences from Lochnagar, Cairngorm Mts., Scotland - UK final report for CHILL-10,000

    Get PDF
    The CHILL 10,000 research objective at Lochnagar is to examine proxy data for temperature and climate conditions. Changes in lake sediment stratigraphical data can be used to reconstruct past conditions. These proxies include organic and minerogenic matter as a bulk proxy for catchment and within-lake productivity, chironomids as a proxy for air temperature, diatoms as an indicator for lake water pH, pollen as an indicator of catchment vegetation and finally biomarkers to help determine changes in proportions of organic source material within the lake mud

    Recent ecosystem dynamics in nine North African lakes in the CASSARINA Project

    Get PDF
    An integrated multi-disciplinary study of nine North African lakes (CASSARINA) aims to establish ecological baselines and to explore responses to 20th century human impacts on their ecosystems. Water chemistry measurements (1997–1998) demonstrate a wide range from dilute oligotrophic to calcareous freshwaters and from mildly brackish to hypersaline lagoons. The biota are consequently highly diverse. Aquatic ecosystem responses to environmental stress over the last 100–200 years in all nine lakes are summarised by detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) of plant and animal macrofossil, zooplankton, diatom, and pollen data from short sediment cores. DCA proved to be a powerful tool for summarising multi-proxy sediment records and ecosystem dynamics. Compositional changes measured by the DCAs have been very large and rapid, often over a few decades; as great as climate-controlled late-glacial changes over 2000 years and larger than most Holocene (11000 years) changes. These results emphasise the strength of human impact on the lakes and the surprisingly great resilience and dynamism of their ecosystems. The DCA summaries for the most recent decades indicate ecosystem disequilibrium in all the lakes, implying that their future stability is uncertain and that large or damaging changes may soon occur if the stresses are maintained. Thresholds have recently been passed in 3 lakes. During the project, Merja Bokka (Morocco) was drained and cultivated. The unique acid Megene Chitane (Tunisia) is in danger of drying up permanently due to water extraction. Freshwater diversion from Garaet El Ichkeul (Tunisia) has dramatically altered its wildlife habitat, as reed-marshes were replaced by salt-marsh and bare mud within 20 years. In contrast, the ecosystems of the Delta lakes (Egypt) have responded dramatically to the year-round inflow of fresh irrigation water controlled by Nile dams and the rise in the freshwater table due to inadequate drainage in the flat delta. The Project has demonstrated remarkably rapid responses by the lakes to environmental stresses. In particular, it highlights the threats to wetland-lake ecosystems in North Africa if uncontrolled exploitation continues

    A multi-proxy study of lake-development in response to catchment changes during the Holocene at Lochnagar, north-east Scotland

    No full text
    This paper describes a multi-core lake sediment study using pollen, diatoms, and chironomids, together with magnetics and sediment biogeochemistry, as biotic and abiotic proxies to infer lake development in response to environmental change during the Holocene at Lochnagar in the eastern Highlands of Scotland. Diatoms are used to infer pH, chironomids to infer temperature, with pollen and plant megafossils acting as an independent proxy to validate these records and to provide insights into changes in catchment vegetation and soils. Lipid biomarkers are explored for their potential to provide additional information on lake productivity. The results indicate highly distinctive fluctuations in the loss-on-ignition (LOI) record, which are in phase with changes in some biotic (chironomid head-capsule concentration) and abiotic (coarse silt particle size fraction, and lipid and chlorine fractions) variables. Catchment-driven changes due to the development and degredation of soils, and the natural succession and human intervention on terrestrial catchment vegetation have the strongest influence on the diatom and chironomid assemblages. These catchment processes resulted in the natural acidification of the lake water. Post-industrial acidification of the lake was also influential on the lake biota. Climate-driven temperature change appears to have had only a weak influence on the biota with declines in cold stenothermic chironomid taxa in response to Early Holocene warming and declines in thermophilic chironomids in response to cooling at about 2600 cal. yr BP. © 2005 Published by Elsevier B.V
    corecore