18 research outputs found
Extended Cave Drip Water Time Series Captures the 2015–2016 El Niño in Northern Borneo
Time series of cave drip water oxygen isotopes (δ18O) provide site‐specific assessments of the contributions of climate and karst processes to stalagmite δ18O records employed for hydroclimate reconstructions. We present ~12‐year‐long time series of biweekly cave drip water δ18O variations from three sites as well as a daily resolved local rainfall δ18O record from Gunung Mulu National Park in northern Borneo. Drip water δ18O variations closely match rainfall δ18O variations averaged over the preceding 3–18 months. We observe coherent interannual drip water δ18O variability of ~3‰ to 5‰ related to the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), with sustained positive rainfall and drip water δ18O anomalies observed during the 2015/2016 El Niño. Evidence of nonlinear behavior at one of three drip water monitoring sites implies a time‐varying contribution from a longer‐term reservoir. Our results suggest that well‐replicated, high‐resolution stalagmite δ18O reconstructions from Mulu could characterize past ENSO‐related variability in regional hydroclimate.Plain Language SummaryCave stalagmites allow for the reconstruction of past regional rainfall variability over the last hundreds of thousands of years with robust age control. Such reconstructions rely on the fact that differences in the isotopic composition of rainwater set by regional rainfall patterns is preserved as the rainwater travels through cave bedrock to feed the cave drip waters forming stalagmites. Long‐term monitoring of rainwater and cave drip water isotopes ground truth the climate to stalagmite relationship across modern‐day changes in regional rainfall. Twelve years of monitoring data presented in this study identify individual El Niño–Southern Oscillation events in rainfall and cave drip water isotopic composition, providing a strong foundation for stalagmite‐based climate reconstructions from this site.Key PointsThree 12‐year‐long cave drip water δ18O time series capture El Niño and La Niña events in northern BorneoEstimates of karst residence times range from 3 to 18 months, with a secondary contribution from a longer‐term reservoir at one drip siteDrip water nonstationarity implies multiple stalagmites are required to reconstruct El Niño–Southern Oscillation variability over timePeer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/154266/1/grl60264-sup-0002-2019GL086363-SI.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/154266/2/grl60264_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/154266/3/grl60264.pd
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Paired stable isotopologues in precipitation and vapor: A case study of the amount effect within western tropical Pacific storms
Understanding controls on the stable isotopic composition of precipitation and vapor in the West Pacific Warm Pool is vital for accurate representation of convective processes in models and correct interpretation of isotope-based paleoclimate proxies, yet a lack of direct observational evidence precludes the utility of these isotopic tracers. Results from a measurement campaign at Manus Island, Papua New Guinea from 28 April to 8 May 2013 demonstrate variability in the stable isotopic composition (δD and δ18O) of precipitation and vapor in individual precipitation events and over a 10 day period. Isotope ratios in water vapor and precipitation progressively increased throughout the period of measurement, coincident with a transition from high to low regional convective activity. Vapor isotope ratios approached equilibrium with seawater during the quiescent period and likely reflected downwind advection of distilled vapor and re-evaporation of rainfall during the period of regional convection. On a 5 min timescale across individual storms, isotope ratios in precipitation were strongly correlated with isotope ratios in surface vapor. However, individual precipitation isotope ratios were not strongly correlated with surface meteorological data, including precipitation rate, in all storms. Yet across all events, precipitation deuterium excess was negatively correlated with surface temperature, sea level pressure, and cloud base height and positively correlated with precipitation rate and relative humidity. Paired surface precipitation and vapor isotope ratios indicate condensation at boundary layer temperatures. The ratio of these paired values decreased with increasing precipitation rate during some precipitation events, suggesting rain re-evaporation and precipitation in equilibrium with an isotopically distinct upper level moisture source. Results from the short campaign support the interpretation that isotope ratios in precipitation and vapor in the western tropical Pacific are indicators of regional convective intensity at the timescale of days to weeks. However, a nonstationary relationship between rain rate and stable isotope ratios in precipitation during individual convective events suggests that condensation, rain evaporation, moisture recycling, and regional moisture convergence do not always yield an amount effect relationship on intraevent timescales
Northern Borneo stalagmite records reveal West Pacific hydroclimate across MIS 5 and 6
Over the past decades, tropical stalagmite δ^(18)O records have provided valuable insight on glacial and interglacial hydrological variability and its relationship to a variety of natural climate forcings. The transition out of the penultimate glaciation (MIS 6) represents an important target for tropical hydroclimate reconstructions, yet relatively few such reconstructions resolve this transition. Particularly, comparisons between Termination 1 and 2 provide critical insight on the extent and influence of proposed climate mechanisms determined from paleorecords and model experiments spanning the recent deglaciation. Here we present a new compilation of western tropical Pacific hydrology spanning 0–160 ky BP, constructed from eleven different U/Th-dated stalagmite δ^(18)O records from Gunung Mulu National Park in northern Borneo. The reconstruction exhibits significant precessional power in phase with boreal fall insolation strength over the 0–160 ky BP period, identifying precessional insolation forcing as the dominant driver of hydroclimate variability in northern Borneo on orbital timescales. A comparison with a network of paleoclimate records from the circum-Pacific suggests the insolation sensitivity may arise from changes in the Walker circulation system. Distinct millennial-scale increases in stalagmite δ^(18)O, indicative of reduced regional convection, occur within glacial terminations and may reflect a response to shifts in inter-hemispheric temperature gradients. Our results imply that hydroclimate in this region is sensitive to external forcing, with a response dominated by large-scale temperature gradients
Transformation of ENSO-related rainwater to dripwater δ^(18)O variability by vadose water mixing
Speleothem oxygen isotopes (δ^(18)O) are often used to reconstruct past rainfall δ^(18)O variability, and thereby hydroclimate changes, in many regions of the world. However, poor constraints on the karst hydrological processes that transform rainfall signals into cave dripwater add significant uncertainty to interpretations of speleothem-based reconstructions. Here we present several 6.5 year, biweekly dripwater δ^(18)O time series from northern Borneo and compare them to local rainfall δ^(18)O variability. We demonstrate that vadose water mixing is the primary rainfall-to-dripwater transformation process at our site, where dripwater δ^(18)O reflects amount-weighted rainfall δ^(18)O integrated over the previous 3–10 months. We document large interannual dripwater δ^(18)O variability related to the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), with amplitudes inversely correlated to dripwater residence times. According to a simple stalagmite forward model, asymmetrical ENSO extremes produce significant offsets in stalagmite δ^(18)O time series given different dripwater residence times. Our study highlights the utility of generating multiyear, paired time series of rainfall and dripwater δ^(18)O to aid interpretations of stalagmite δ^(18)O reconstructions
Diurnal to interannual rainfall δ 18 O variations in northern Borneo driven by regional hydrology
The relationship between climate variability and rainfall oxygen isotopic (δ18O) variability is poorly constrained, especially in the tropics, where many key paleoclimate records rely on past rainfall isotopes as proxies for hydroclimate. Here we present a daily-resolved, 5-yr-long timeseries of rainfall δ18O from Gunung Mulu National Park, located in northern Borneo (4°N, 114°E) in the heart of the West Pacific Warm Pool, and compare it to local and regional climatic variables. Daily rainfall δ18O values range from +0.7‰ to −18.5‰ and exhibit a weak but significant inverse relationship with daily local precipitation amount (R=−0.19, p<0.05), consistent with the tropical amount effect. Day-to-day δ18O variability at Mulu is best correlated to regional precipitation amount averaged over the preceding week (R=−0.64, p<0.01). The inverse relationship between Mulu rainfall δ18O and local (regional) precipitation amount increases with increased temporal averaging, reaching R=−0.56 (R=−0.72) on monthly timescales. Large, negative, multi-day rainfall δ18O anomalies of up to 16‰ occur every 30–90 days and are closely associated with wet phases of the intraseasonal Madden–Julian Oscillation. A weak, semi-annual seasonal cycle in rainfall δ18O of 2–3‰ bears little resemblance to seasonal precipitation variability, pointing to a complex sequence of moisture sources and/or trajectories over the course of the year. Interannual rainfall δ18O variations of 6–8‰ are significantly correlated with indices of the El Niño Southern Oscillation, with increased rainfall δ18O during relatively dry El Niño conditions, and vice versa during La Nina events. We find that Mulu rainfall δ18O outperforms Mulu precipitation amount as a tracer of basin-scale climate variability, highlighting the time- and space-integrative nature of rainfall δ18O. Taken together, our results suggest that rainfall δ18O variability at Mulu is significantly influenced by the strength of regional convective activity. As such, our study provides further empirical support for the interpretation of δ18O-based paleo-reconstructions from northern Borneo stalagmites as robust indicators of regional-scale hydroclimate variability, where higher δ18O reflects regional drying
Diurnal to interannual rainfall δ18O variations in northern Borneo driven by regional hydrology
The relationship between climate variability and rainfall oxygen isotopic (δ18O) variability is poorly constrained, especially in the tropics, where many key paleoclimate records rely on past rainfall isotopes as proxies for hydroclimate. Here we present a daily-resolved, 5-yr-long timeseries of rainfall δ18O from Gunung Mulu National Park, located in northern Borneo (4°N, 114°E) in the heart of the West Pacific Warm Pool, and compare it to local and regional climatic variables. Daily rainfall δ18O values range from +0.7‰ to -18.5‰ and exhibit a weak but significant inverse relationship with daily local precipitation amount (R=-0.19, p<0.05), consistent with the tropical amount effect. Day-to-day δ18O variability at Mulu is best correlated to regional precipitation amount averaged over the preceding week (R=-0.64, p<0.01). The inverse relationship between Mulu rainfall δ18O and local (regional) precipitation amount increases with increased temporal averaging, reaching R=-0.56 (R=-0.72) on monthly timescales. Large, negative, multi-day rainfall δ18O anomalies of up to 16‰ occur every 30-90 days and are closely associated with wet phases of the intraseasonal Madden-Julian Oscillation. A weak, semi-annual seasonal cycle in rainfall δ18O of 2-3‰ bears little resemblance to seasonal precipitation variability, pointing to a complex sequence of moisture sources and/or trajectories over the course of the year. Interannual rainfall δ18O variations of 6-8‰ are significantly correlated with indices of the El Niño Southern Oscillation, with increased rainfall δ18O during relatively dry El Niño conditions, and vice versa during La Nina events. We find that Mulu rainfall δ18O outperforms Mulu precipitation amount as a tracer of basin-scale climate variability, highlighting the time- and space-integrative nature of rainfall δ18O. Taken together, our results suggest that rainfall δ18O variability at Mulu is significantly influenced by the strength of regional convective activity. As such, our study provides further empirical support for the interpretation of δ18O-based paleo-reconstructions from northern Borneo stalagmites as robust indicators of regional-scale hydroclimate variability, where higher δ18O reflects regional dryin
Northern Borneo stalagmite records reveal West Pacific hydroclimate across MIS 5 and 6
Over the past decades, tropical stalagmite δ18Orecords have provided valuable insight on glacial and interglacial hydrological variability and its relationship to a variety of natural climate forcings. The transition out of the penultimate glaciation (MIS 6) represents an important target for tropical hydroclimate reconstructions, yet relatively few such reconstructions resolve this transition. Particularly, comparisons between Termination1 and 2 provide critical insight on the extent and influence of proposed climate mechanisms determined from paleorecords and model experiments spanning the recent deglaciation. Here we present a new compilation of western tropical Pacific hydrology spanning 0–160kyBP, constructed from eleven different U/Th-dated stalagmite δ18Orecords from Gunung Mulu National Park in northern Borneo. The reconstruction exhibits significant precessional power in phase with boreal fall insolation strength over the 0–160kyBP period, identifying precessional insolation forcing as the dominant driver of hydroclimate variability in northern Borneo on orbital timescales. A comparison with a network of paleoclimate records from the circum-Pacific suggests the insolation sensitivity may arise from changes in the Walker circulation system. Distinct millennial-scale increases in stalagmite δ18O, indicative of reduced regional convection, occur within glacial terminations and may reflect a response to shifts in inter-hemispheric temperature gradients. Our results imply that hydroclimate in this region is sensitive to external forcing, with a response dominated by large-scale temperature gradients.
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Transformation of ENSO‐related rainwater to dripwater δ18O variability by vadose water mixing
Speleothem oxygen isotopes (δ18O) are often used to reconstruct past rainfall δ18O variability, and thereby hydroclimate changes, in many regions of the world. However, poor constraints on the karst hydrological processes that transform rainfall signals into cave dripwater add significant uncertainty to interpretations of speleothem-based reconstructions. Here we present several 6.5 year, biweekly dripwater δ18O time series from northern Borneo and compare them to local rainfall δ18O variability. We demonstrate that vadose water mixing is the primary rainfall-to-dripwater transformation process at our site, where dripwater δ18O reflects amount-weighted rainfall δ18O integrated over the previous 3–10 months. We document large interannual dripwater δ18O variability related to the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), with amplitudes inversely correlated to dripwater residence times. According to a simple stalagmite forward model, asymmetrical ENSO extremes produce significant offsets in stalagmite δ18O time series given different dripwater residence times. Our study highlights the utility of generating multiyear, paired time series of rainfall and dripwater δ18O to aid interpretations of stalagmite δ18O reconstructions
C. elegans Germ Cells Show Temperature and Age-Dependent Expression of Cer1, a Gypsy/Ty3-Related Retrotransposon
Virus-like particles (VLPs) have not been observed in Caenorhabditis germ cells, although nematode genomes contain low numbers of retrotransposon and retroviral sequences. We used electron microscopy to search for VLPs in various wild strains of Caenorhabditis, and observed very rare candidate VLPs in some strains, including the standard laboratory strain of C. elegans, N2. We identified the N2 VLPs as capsids produced by Cer1, a retrotransposon in the Gypsy/Ty3 family of retroviruses/retrotransposons. Cer1 expression is age and temperature dependent, with abundant expression at 15°C and no detectable expression at 25°C, explaining how VLPs escaped detection in previous studies. Similar age and temperature-dependent expression of Cer1 retrotransposons was observed for several other wild strains, indicating that these properties are common, if not integral, features of this retroelement. Retrotransposons, in contrast to DNA transposons, have a cytoplasmic stage in replication, and those that infect non-dividing cells must pass their genomic material through nuclear pores. In most C. elegans germ cells, nuclear pores are largely covered by germline-specific organelles called P granules. Our results suggest that Cer1 capsids target meiotic germ cells exiting pachytene, when free nuclear pores are added to the nuclear envelope and existing P granules begin to be removed. In pachytene germ cells, Cer1 capsids concentrate away from nuclei on a subset of microtubules that are exceptionally resistant to microtubule inhibitors; the capsids can aggregate these stable microtubules in older adults, which exhibit a temperature-dependent decrease in egg viability. When germ cells exit pachytene, the stable microtubules disappear and capsids redistribute close to nuclei that have P granule-free nuclear pores. This redistribution is microtubule dependent, suggesting that capsids that are released from stable microtubules transfer onto new, dynamic microtubules to track toward nuclei. These studies introduce C. elegans as a model to study the interplay between retroelements and germ cell biology
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ConroyPairedStableIsotopologuesDataSetS1.xlsx
Understanding controls on the stable isotopic composition of precipitation and vapor in the West Pacific Warm Pool is vital for accurate representation of convective processes in models and correct interpretation of isotope-based paleoclimate proxies, yet a lack of direct observational evidence precludes the utility of these isotopic tracers. Results from a measurement campaign at Manus Island, Papua New Guinea from 28 April to 8 May 2013 demonstrate variability in the stable isotopic composition (δD and δ18O) of precipitation and vapor in individual precipitation events and over a 10 day period. Isotope ratios in water vapor and precipitation progressively increased throughout the period of measurement, coincident with a transition from high to low regional convective activity. Vapor isotope ratios approached equilibrium with seawater during the quiescent period and likely reflected downwind advection of distilled vapor and re-evaporation of rainfall during the period of regional convection. On a 5 min timescale across individual storms, isotope ratios in precipitation were strongly correlated with isotope ratios in surface vapor. However, individual precipitation isotope ratios were not strongly correlated with surface meteorological data, including precipitation rate, in all storms. Yet across all events, precipitation deuterium excess was negatively correlated with surface temperature, sea level pressure, and cloud base height and positively correlated with precipitation rate and relative humidity. Paired surface precipitation and vapor isotope ratios indicate condensation at boundary layer temperatures. The ratio of these paired values decreased with increasing precipitation rate during some precipitation events, suggesting rain re-evaporation and precipitation in equilibrium with an isotopically distinct upper level moisture source. Results from the short campaign support the interpretation that isotope ratios in precipitation and vapor in the western tropical Pacific are indicators of regional convective intensity at the timescale of days to weeks. However, a nonstationary relationship between rain rate and stable isotope ratios in precipitation during individual convective events suggests that condensation, rain evaporation, moisture recycling, and regional moisture convergence do not always yield an amount effect relationship on intraevent timescales.Keywords: stable isotope, tropical Pacific, amount effec