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Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians

Recent decades have been marked by unprecendented environmental changes which threaten the integrity of freshwater systems and their ecological value. Although most of these changes can be attributed to human activities, disentagling natural and anthropogenic drivers remains a challenge. In this stu...

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Autores principales: Haliuc, Aritina, Buczkó, Krisztina, Hutchinson, Simon M., Ács, Éva, Magyari, Enikő K., Korponai, Janos, Begy, Robert-Csaba, Vasilache, Daniela, Zak, Michal, Veres, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33002077
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239209
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author Haliuc, Aritina
Buczkó, Krisztina
Hutchinson, Simon M.
Ács, Éva
Magyari, Enikő K.
Korponai, Janos
Begy, Robert-Csaba
Vasilache, Daniela
Zak, Michal
Veres, Daniel
author_facet Haliuc, Aritina
Buczkó, Krisztina
Hutchinson, Simon M.
Ács, Éva
Magyari, Enikő K.
Korponai, Janos
Begy, Robert-Csaba
Vasilache, Daniela
Zak, Michal
Veres, Daniel
author_sort Haliuc, Aritina
collection PubMed
description Recent decades have been marked by unprecendented environmental changes which threaten the integrity of freshwater systems and their ecological value. Although most of these changes can be attributed to human activities, disentagling natural and anthropogenic drivers remains a challenge. In this study, surface sediments from Lake Ighiel, a mid-altitude site in the Carpathian Mts (Romania) were investigated following high-resolution sedimentological, geochemical, environmental magnetic and diatom analyses supported by historical cartographic and documentary evidence. Our results suggest that between 1920 and 1960 the study area experienced no significant anthropogenic impact. An excellent correspondence is observed between lake proxy responses (e.g., growth of submerged macrophytes, high detrital input, shifts in diatom assemblages) and parameters tracking natural hydroclimate variability (e.g., temperature, NAO). This highlights a dominant natural hydroclimatic control on the lacustrine system. From 1960 however, the depositional regime shifted markedly from laminated to homogenous clays; since then geochemical and magnetic data document a trend of significant (and on-going) subsurface erosion across the catchment. This is paralleled by a shift in lake ecosystem conditions denoting a strong response to an intensified anthropogenic impact, mainly through forestry. An increase in detrital input and marked changes in the diatom community are observed over the last three decades, alongside accelerated sedimentation rates following enhanced grazing and deforestation in the catchment. Recent shifts in diatom assemblages may also reflect forcing from atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition, a key recent drive of diatom community turnover in mountain lakes. In general, enhanced human pressure alongside intermittent hydroclimate forcing drastically altered the landscape around Lake Ighiel and thus, the sedimentation regime and the ecosystem’s health. However, paleoenvironmental signals tracking natural hydroclimate variability are also clearly discernible in the proxy data. Our work illustrates the complex link between the drivers of catchment-scale impacts on one hand, and lake proxy responses on the other, highlighting the importance of an integrated historical and palaeolimnological approach to better assess lake system changes.
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spelling pubmed-75292342020-10-02 Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians Haliuc, Aritina Buczkó, Krisztina Hutchinson, Simon M. Ács, Éva Magyari, Enikő K. Korponai, Janos Begy, Robert-Csaba Vasilache, Daniela Zak, Michal Veres, Daniel PLoS One Research Article Recent decades have been marked by unprecendented environmental changes which threaten the integrity of freshwater systems and their ecological value. Although most of these changes can be attributed to human activities, disentagling natural and anthropogenic drivers remains a challenge. In this study, surface sediments from Lake Ighiel, a mid-altitude site in the Carpathian Mts (Romania) were investigated following high-resolution sedimentological, geochemical, environmental magnetic and diatom analyses supported by historical cartographic and documentary evidence. Our results suggest that between 1920 and 1960 the study area experienced no significant anthropogenic impact. An excellent correspondence is observed between lake proxy responses (e.g., growth of submerged macrophytes, high detrital input, shifts in diatom assemblages) and parameters tracking natural hydroclimate variability (e.g., temperature, NAO). This highlights a dominant natural hydroclimatic control on the lacustrine system. From 1960 however, the depositional regime shifted markedly from laminated to homogenous clays; since then geochemical and magnetic data document a trend of significant (and on-going) subsurface erosion across the catchment. This is paralleled by a shift in lake ecosystem conditions denoting a strong response to an intensified anthropogenic impact, mainly through forestry. An increase in detrital input and marked changes in the diatom community are observed over the last three decades, alongside accelerated sedimentation rates following enhanced grazing and deforestation in the catchment. Recent shifts in diatom assemblages may also reflect forcing from atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition, a key recent drive of diatom community turnover in mountain lakes. In general, enhanced human pressure alongside intermittent hydroclimate forcing drastically altered the landscape around Lake Ighiel and thus, the sedimentation regime and the ecosystem’s health. However, paleoenvironmental signals tracking natural hydroclimate variability are also clearly discernible in the proxy data. Our work illustrates the complex link between the drivers of catchment-scale impacts on one hand, and lake proxy responses on the other, highlighting the importance of an integrated historical and palaeolimnological approach to better assess lake system changes. Public Library of Science 2020-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7529234/ /pubmed/33002077 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239209 Text en © 2020 Haliuc 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Haliuc, Aritina
Buczkó, Krisztina
Hutchinson, Simon M.
Ács, Éva
Magyari, Enikő K.
Korponai, Janos
Begy, Robert-Csaba
Vasilache, Daniela
Zak, Michal
Veres, Daniel
Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians
title Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians
title_full Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians
title_fullStr Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians
title_full_unstemmed Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians
title_short Climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, Romanian Carpathians
title_sort climate and land-use as the main drivers of recent environmental change in a mid-altitude mountain lake, romanian carpathians
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33002077
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239209
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