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Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika

Lake Tanganyika, the deepest and most voluminous lake in Africa, has warmed over the last century in response to climate change. Separate analyses of surface warming rates estimated from in situ instruments, satellites, and a paleolimnological temperature proxy (TEX(86)) disagree, leaving uncertaint...

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Autores principales: Kraemer, Benjamin M., Hook, Simon, Huttula, Timo, Kotilainen, Pekka, O’Reilly, Catherine M., Peltonen, Anu, Plisnier, Pierre-Denis, Sarvala, Jouko, Tamatamah, Rashid, Vadeboncoeur, Yvonne, Wehrli, Bernhard, McIntyre, Peter B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4492510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26147964
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132490
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author Kraemer, Benjamin M.
Hook, Simon
Huttula, Timo
Kotilainen, Pekka
O’Reilly, Catherine M.
Peltonen, Anu
Plisnier, Pierre-Denis
Sarvala, Jouko
Tamatamah, Rashid
Vadeboncoeur, Yvonne
Wehrli, Bernhard
McIntyre, Peter B.
author_facet Kraemer, Benjamin M.
Hook, Simon
Huttula, Timo
Kotilainen, Pekka
O’Reilly, Catherine M.
Peltonen, Anu
Plisnier, Pierre-Denis
Sarvala, Jouko
Tamatamah, Rashid
Vadeboncoeur, Yvonne
Wehrli, Bernhard
McIntyre, Peter B.
author_sort Kraemer, Benjamin M.
collection PubMed
description Lake Tanganyika, the deepest and most voluminous lake in Africa, has warmed over the last century in response to climate change. Separate analyses of surface warming rates estimated from in situ instruments, satellites, and a paleolimnological temperature proxy (TEX(86)) disagree, leaving uncertainty about the thermal sensitivity of Lake Tanganyika to climate change. Here, we use a comprehensive database of in situ temperature data from the top 100 meters of the water column that span the lake’s seasonal range and lateral extent to demonstrate that long-term temperature trends in Lake Tanganyika depend strongly on depth, season, and latitude. The observed spatiotemporal variation in surface warming rates accounts for small differences between warming rate estimates from in situ instruments and satellite data. However, after accounting for spatiotemporal variation in temperature and warming rates, the TEX(86) paleolimnological proxy yields lower surface temperatures (1.46 °C lower on average) and faster warming rates (by a factor of three) than in situ measurements. Based on the ecology of Thaumarchaeota (the microbes whose biomolecules are involved with generating the TEX(86) proxy), we offer a reinterpretation of the TEX(86) data from Lake Tanganyika as the temperature of the low-oxygen zone, rather than of the lake surface temperature as has been suggested previously. Our analyses provide a thorough accounting of spatiotemporal variation in warming rates, offering strong evidence that thermal and ecological shifts observed in this massive tropical lake over the last century are robust and in step with global climate change.
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spelling pubmed-44925102015-07-15 Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika Kraemer, Benjamin M. Hook, Simon Huttula, Timo Kotilainen, Pekka O’Reilly, Catherine M. Peltonen, Anu Plisnier, Pierre-Denis Sarvala, Jouko Tamatamah, Rashid Vadeboncoeur, Yvonne Wehrli, Bernhard McIntyre, Peter B. PLoS One Research Article Lake Tanganyika, the deepest and most voluminous lake in Africa, has warmed over the last century in response to climate change. Separate analyses of surface warming rates estimated from in situ instruments, satellites, and a paleolimnological temperature proxy (TEX(86)) disagree, leaving uncertainty about the thermal sensitivity of Lake Tanganyika to climate change. Here, we use a comprehensive database of in situ temperature data from the top 100 meters of the water column that span the lake’s seasonal range and lateral extent to demonstrate that long-term temperature trends in Lake Tanganyika depend strongly on depth, season, and latitude. The observed spatiotemporal variation in surface warming rates accounts for small differences between warming rate estimates from in situ instruments and satellite data. However, after accounting for spatiotemporal variation in temperature and warming rates, the TEX(86) paleolimnological proxy yields lower surface temperatures (1.46 °C lower on average) and faster warming rates (by a factor of three) than in situ measurements. Based on the ecology of Thaumarchaeota (the microbes whose biomolecules are involved with generating the TEX(86) proxy), we offer a reinterpretation of the TEX(86) data from Lake Tanganyika as the temperature of the low-oxygen zone, rather than of the lake surface temperature as has been suggested previously. Our analyses provide a thorough accounting of spatiotemporal variation in warming rates, offering strong evidence that thermal and ecological shifts observed in this massive tropical lake over the last century are robust and in step with global climate change. Public Library of Science 2015-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4492510/ /pubmed/26147964 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132490 Text en © 2015 Kraemer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kraemer, Benjamin M.
Hook, Simon
Huttula, Timo
Kotilainen, Pekka
O’Reilly, Catherine M.
Peltonen, Anu
Plisnier, Pierre-Denis
Sarvala, Jouko
Tamatamah, Rashid
Vadeboncoeur, Yvonne
Wehrli, Bernhard
McIntyre, Peter B.
Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika
title Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika
title_full Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika
title_fullStr Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika
title_full_unstemmed Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika
title_short Century-Long Warming Trends in the Upper Water Column of Lake Tanganyika
title_sort century-long warming trends in the upper water column of lake tanganyika
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4492510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26147964
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0132490
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