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Limnological effects of growth and cessation of agricultural land use in Ladoga Karelia: sedimentary pollen and diatom analyses
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Juha O?MiettinenEmail author  Heikki?Simola  Elisabeth?Gr?nlund  Jaana?Lahtinen  Riitta?Niinioja
Institution:(1) Karelian Institute, University of Joensuu, P.O. Box 111, FIN-80101 Joensuu, Finland;(2) North Karelia Polytechnic, Kontionkatu 4/4, FIN-80200 Joensuu, Finland;(3) North Karelia Regional Environment Centre, P.O.Box 69, FIN-80101 Joensuu, Finland
Abstract:Reference conditions and changes in limnological conditions during the 20th century have been inferred in a palaeolimnological study of sediments from six lakes of the District of Sortavala, Karelian Republic, Russia. The area is former Finnish territory, which was in intensive use for arable field cultivation until the World War II, when the area was ceded to the Soviet Union. After the war, farming was resumed by cattle sovkhozes, and the fields were mainly used as pasture without regular ploughing. We have studied the history of eutrophication and recovery in some lakes related with the changes of agricultural intensity. The trophic level of the lakes was studied by sedimentary diatom assemblages, including reconstructions of total phosphorus levels in the lakes based on a weighted averaging transfer function. Pollen analyses were used to assess the changes in the land use near the lakes. Valuable background data on all the lakes used in the present study are provided by a doctoral thesis done on their limnology from the 1920s. According to our results, the four lakes situated on the clayey lowlands near the coast of Lake Ladoga were eutrophicating during the first half of the 20th century, and in two of them, a rapid recovery is evident. In two lakes situated in hilly landscape with limited agricultural activities, only minor changes are recorded in the diatom profiles.
Keywords:Diatoms  Ladoga Karelia  Lakes  Land use  Palaeolimnology  Pollen  Recovery
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