Ice-wedge polygons as habitat for freshwater ostracods in the Indigirka Lowland, north-east Siberia

Ice-wedge polygons often accommodate small and shallow periglacial surface waters. They provide suitable habitats for freshwater ostracods (Crustacea, Ostracoda) in Arctic Siberian tundra landscapes, and are well known from Pleistocene and Holocene permafrost successions. Freshwater ostracods are se...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schneider, Andrea, Wetterich, Sebastian, Sanniel, Britta, Schirrmeister, Lutz, Pestryakova, L.yudmila
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: University of Lisbon and the University of Évora 2014
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/35760/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/35760/1/Poster_EUCOPIV_schneider.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.48807
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.48807.d001
Description
Summary:Ice-wedge polygons often accommodate small and shallow periglacial surface waters. They provide suitable habitats for freshwater ostracods (Crustacea, Ostracoda) in Arctic Siberian tundra landscapes, and are well known from Pleistocene and Holocene permafrost successions. Freshwater ostracods are sensitive to environmental conditions, and have been widely used as biological indicators for past and present environmental changes in temperate regions. In Arctic environments, habitat conditions of ice-wedge polygon ponds are barely constrained, and the abundance and diversity of ostracods is currently documented in scattered records with incomplete ecological characterizations. In order to further develop the ostracods potential as biological indicators from ice-wedge polygon tundra landscapes, the taxonomic and ecological range of ostracod assemblages and habitat conditions in polygon ponds in the Indigirka Lowland (north-east Siberia, Russia) were determined. Furthermore, we focused the seasonal variability of a selected pond site, its ostracod population, and the geochemical properties of ostracod valve calcite. Well-oxygenated and dilute ponds with slightly acidic pH hosted an abundant and diverse ostracod fauna. A total of 4849 identified ostracods from 8 species and 3 taxa represent the first record of the ostracod fauna in the Indigirka Lowland. Fabaeformiscandona krochini and Fabaeformiscandona groenlandica were documented for the first time in continental Siberia. Fabaeformiscandona sp. I and Fabaeformiscandona sp. II were newly found taxa holding a strong indicative potential for hydrochemical parameters. Repeated sampling of a typical low-center polygon pond revealed detailed insights in the population dynamics of Fabaeformiscandona pedata. Substrate properties, physical and hydrochemical conditions in the polygon ponds offered the ostracods largely homogeneous habitats. However, river flooding and differences in pond morphology resulted in variations in substrate, vegetation, hydrochemical and stable ...