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The sediment record of the past 200 years in a Swiss high-alpine lake: Hagelseewli (2339 m a.s.l.)
Authors:AF Lotter  PG Appleby  R Bindler  JA Dearing  J-A Grytnes  W Hofmann  C Kamenik  A Lami  DM Livingstone  C Ohlendorf  N Rose  M Sturm
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Palaeobotany and Palynology, University of Utrecht, Budapestlaan 4, NL-3584 CD Utrecht, The Netherlands;(2) Swiss Federal Institute of Enivronmental Science and Technology (EAWAG), CH-8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland;(3) Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Liverpool, P.O. Box 147, Liverpool, L69 3BX, UK;(4) Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Umeå University, SE-901 87 Umeå, Sweden;(5) Environmental Magnetism Laboratory, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 7ZT, UK;(6) Botanical Institute, University of Bergen, Allégaten 41, N-5007 Bergen, Norway;(7) Max-Planck-Institut für Limnologie, August-Thienemann-Strasse 2, D-24302 Plön, Germany;(8) Institut für Limnologie, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaft, Gaisberg 116, A-5310 Mondsee, Austria;(9) Istituto Italiano di Idrobiologia, CNR, Pallanza, Italy;(10) Environmental Change Research Centre, University College London, 26 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AP, UK;(11) nstitute of Plant Sciences, University of Berne, Altenbergrain 21, CH-3013 Berne, Switzerland
Abstract:Sediment cores spanning the last two centuries were taken in Hagelseewli, a high-elevation lake in the Swiss Alps. Contiguous 0.5 cm samples were analysed for biological remains, including diatoms, chironomids, cladocera, chrysophyte cysts, and fossil pigments. In addition, sedimentological and geochemical variables such as loss-on-ignition, total carbon, nitrogen, sulphur, grain-size and magnetic mineralogy were determined. The results of these analyses were compared to a long instrumental air temperature record that was adapted to the elevation of Hagelseewli by applying mean monthly lapse rates.During much of the time, the lake is in the shadow of a high cliff to the south, so that the lake is ice-covered during much of the year and thus decoupled from climatic forcing. Lake biology is therefore influenced more by the duration of ice-cover than by direct temperature effects during the short open-water season. Long periods of ice-cover result in anoxic water conditions and dissolution of authigenic calcites, leading to carbonate-free sediments.The diversity of chironomid and cladoceran assemblages is extremely low, whereas that of diatom and chrysophyte cyst assemblages is much higher. Weak correlations were observed between the diatom and chrysophyte cyst assemblages on the one hand and summer or autumn air temperatures on the other, but the proportion of variance explained is low, so that air temperature alone cannot account for the degree of variation observed in the paleolimnological record.Analyses of mineral magnetic parameters, spheroidal carbonaceous particles and lead suggest that atmospheric pollution has had a significant effect on the sediments of Hagelseewli, but little effect on the water quality as reflected in the lake biota.
Keywords:diatoms  chironomids  cladocera  chrysophyte cysts  sedimentology  magnetism  SCP  temperature
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