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Lakes as Records of Past Climates

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variation in global or regional climate over time ... Geochronology using 210Pb. Biological indicators-diatoms, chrysophytes, cladocerans, chironomids ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lakes as Records of Past Climates


1
Lakes as Records of Past Climates
2
Overview
  • Climate change
  • Paleolimnology
  • Papers
  • Discussion

3
Climate Change
  • variation in global or regional climate over time
  • driven by external forces or human activities
    (CO2)

4
External Factors
  • Plate tectonics-continental vs. coastal climate
  • Orbital variations-Milankovitch cycles
  • Volcanism- large igneous provinces

5
Anthropogenic Factors
  • Fossil fuels-Industry, automobiles (SOx,NOx,CO2 )
  • Land use-deforestation, agriculture,irrigation

6
Evidence
  • data taken from several ice cores(Fischer et al,
    1999Monin et al, 2004Ethridge et al, 1998)

7
Evidence
  • data taken from several ice cores(Fischer et al,
    1999Monin et al, 2004Ethridge et al, 1998)

8
Paleolimnology
  • Study of aquatic environments of the past

9
Why?
  • Curiosity-lake typology, evolution of ecosystems
    and organisms, biogeography
  • Track anthropogenic changes-restoration
    implications, timelines, degree of changes
  • Understanding past climates-predict future of
    ecosystems?

10
How?
  • Sediment cores
  • Fossils
  • Pigments
  • Stable isotopes

11
Fossils
  • Diatoms
  • Cysts-plankton
  • Pollen, spores
  • Invertebrates
  • Vertebrates

12
Pigments
  • Distinctive to different algae
  • Chlorophylls
  • Accessory pigments

13
Isotopes
  • Time scale dependent
  • Timing of environmental change
  • Carbon, cesium,lead etc.
  • Lead dating accurate to about 150 yrs ago

14
Papers
  • 1. Climate-driven regime shifts in the biological
    communities of arctic lakes (J. P. Smol et al,
    2005 PNAS)
  • 2. Century-long synchrony of fossil algae in a
    chain of Canadian prairie lakes (Patoine and
    Leavitt, 2006 Ecology)

15
1.Background
  • Polar amplification of anthropogenic warming
  • Glacier retreat
  • Sea ice thinning
  • Permafrost degradation

16
1.Background
  • High latitude lakes very responsive to climate
    change
  • Degree of change local
  • Slight warming leads to decreased ice/snow cover,
    longer growing season
  • Higher primary production, new habitat available,
    taxonomic shifts

17
1. Predictions
  • Greater species turnover with higher latitude
  • Biological response of arctic lake communities to
    changes in length ice free season
  • Ice free season is modulated by climate
  • As system passes through climate related
    thresholds, aquatic community composition
    turnover high

18
1.Study Area
  • A-Ellesmere Island
  • B-Ellef Rignes Island
  • C-Baffin Island
  • D-NWT
  • E-Quebec
  • F-Spitsbergen
  • G-Lapland
  • H-Polar Urals

Sample site areas
19
1. Methods
  • 55 samples from 48 Arctic lakes
  • Sediments cores
  • Geochronology using 210Pb
  • Biological indicators-diatoms, chrysophytes,
    cladocerans, chironomids

20
1. Methods
  • DCCA-quantitative estimates of compositional
    turnover-beta-diversity
  • Looked at compositional change along temporal
    gradient (diatoms)
  • Estimated species turnover in past 150 years

21
1.Results and Discussion
  • Northernmost sites-shifts from benthic taxa to
    littoral taxa (diatoms)
  • Climate records show warming trend
  • Consistent with longer growing season and habitat
    expansion

22
1.Results and Discussion
  • Deep water lakes -Baffin Island, Svalbard,
    Fennoscandia, Western subarctic lakes
  • Climate records show warming trend
  • Shift from benthic to planktonic diatom species

23
1.Results and Discussion
  • Labrador and Northern Quebec
  • Little or no change in climate recorded
  • Changes in diatom assemblages not observed

24
1.Results and Discussion
25
2. Background
  • Lakes in same region can show similar annual
    patterns of fluctuation in biological parameters
    (algae)-synchrony (Kratz et al, 1998)
  • High degree of synchrony influenced by large
    scale environmental factors-climate, land use,
    urbanization

26
2. Background
  • Lake synchrony greatest when sites are homogenous
  • What factors responsible for driving changes in
    community composition in lakes?

27
2. Predictions
  • Degree of synchrony of algae between lakes taxon
    specific
  • Synchrony arises from long term increases in
    algal abundance, not short term population
    variability
  • Determination of relative importance of climate,
    resource use and urbanization on synchrony

28
2. Study Area

29
2. Study Area
  • Since 1900
  • 30 day increase in ice free season
  • 25 increase in farming
  • Exponential increase in population of nearest
    city-Regina
  • 50-70 domestic waste water discharged upstream
    of Pasqua Lake

30

31
2. Methods
  • Sediments collected with freeze corer-1 per lake
    (Leavitt et al, 1989)
  • Cores sectioned-annual resolution 210Pb dating
  • Pigment extraction, isolation and identification
    each lake (period, 1776-1995)
  • Analysis of fossil pigments -historical changes
    in abundance and synchrony

32
  • Analysis of fossil pigments

33
2. Methods
  • Determine if synchrony arises from long term or
    short term trends
  • Time series model to describe long term trends in
    fossil pigment concentrations

34
2. Methods
  • gt85 changes explained by climate, resource use
    and urbanization in individual lakes
    (multivariate analysis)
  • Relative importance of above factors on
    synchronous changes in all lakes (variance
    partitioning analysis)

35
2. Results and Discussion
  • Pasqua lake-increase in total algal biomass 20th
    century
  • Less so in downstream lakes
  • All lakes -increased concentration of sedimentary
    pigments since 1950 variable (siliceous algae
    and dinoflagellates nb.)

36
2. Results and Discussion
  • Three groups of pigments of varying chemical
    stability and synchronicity
  • Algal synchrony in Quappelle lakes related to
    long term trends

37
2. Results and Discussion
  • Coherence of pigments greatest in labile
    compounds (Chl-a, fucoxanthin)
  • Synchrony in spring blooming taxa
  • Low overall synchrony of total algal
    abundance-low coherence of summer taxa

38
2. Results and Discussion
  • gt85 of algal variation in individual lakes
    explained by climate, resource use and
    urbanization (multivariate analysis)
  • gt35 synchronous algal fluctuation in all lakes
    explained by climate, resource use and
    urbanization (multivariate analysis)
  • Factors related to algal synchrony differ from
    those related to abundance

39
Differences Between Studies
  • Arctic lakes far from agriculture, forestry,
    cities climate only parameter
  • Quapplelle lakes many other factors
  • Scale of study, 48 vs. 7 lakes

40
Conclusion
  • Lakes can provide a record of past climates
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