Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...

Increased hydrological connectivity due to permafrost degradation is likely to have substantial implications for shallow aquatic systems common to subarctic landscapes due to changes to overland and subsurface flow of water and transport of sediments and dissolved nutrients. Here, we explore the inf...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Medeiros, Andrew, Niemeyer, Alannah, Todd, Anthony, Wolfe, Brent
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Canadian Cryospheric Information Network 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.21963/13241
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch?doi_id=13241
id ftdatacite:10.21963/13241
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.21963/13241 2024-09-15T18:15:11+00:00 Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ... Medeiros, Andrew Niemeyer, Alannah Todd, Anthony Wolfe, Brent 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.21963/13241 https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch?doi_id=13241 en eng Canadian Cryospheric Information Network Dataset dataset 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.21963/13241 2024-07-03T10:34:11Z Increased hydrological connectivity due to permafrost degradation is likely to have substantial implications for shallow aquatic systems common to subarctic landscapes due to changes to overland and subsurface flow of water and transport of sediments and dissolved nutrients. Here, we explore the influence of increased connectivity on aquatic productivity based on multi-parameter palaeolimnological analysis of two lakes located near Inuvik (Northwest Territories, Canada). We contrast a lake with little evidence of permafrost degradation in the surrounding area (Lake PG03) to one that has multiple connections to the terrestrial landscape through a network of thaw polygons in the lake catchment (Lake PG09). Comparisons of biological indicators (chironomids) and organic carbon and nitrogen elemental and isotope composition reveal recent divergent lake histories. The chironomid assemblage of Lake PG03 followed an expected temperature gradient, with a warming signal evident since ~1970 CE, whereas the chironomid ... : Paleolimnological investigation of the influence of thaw polygons on aquatic productivity in order to understand the influence of landscape connectivity on biological indicators used for paleoclimate reconstruction. Sediment cores from two lakes were examined using paleolimnological methods in the Mackenzie Uplands region northeast of Inuvik, N.W.T. For each lake, subfossil chironomids and elemental and isotopic carbon and nitrogen were analyzed. These data were then used in a chironomid paleotemperature model for reconstructing past temperature. ... Dataset Inuvik Northwest Territories permafrost Subarctic DataCite
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description Increased hydrological connectivity due to permafrost degradation is likely to have substantial implications for shallow aquatic systems common to subarctic landscapes due to changes to overland and subsurface flow of water and transport of sediments and dissolved nutrients. Here, we explore the influence of increased connectivity on aquatic productivity based on multi-parameter palaeolimnological analysis of two lakes located near Inuvik (Northwest Territories, Canada). We contrast a lake with little evidence of permafrost degradation in the surrounding area (Lake PG03) to one that has multiple connections to the terrestrial landscape through a network of thaw polygons in the lake catchment (Lake PG09). Comparisons of biological indicators (chironomids) and organic carbon and nitrogen elemental and isotope composition reveal recent divergent lake histories. The chironomid assemblage of Lake PG03 followed an expected temperature gradient, with a warming signal evident since ~1970 CE, whereas the chironomid ... : Paleolimnological investigation of the influence of thaw polygons on aquatic productivity in order to understand the influence of landscape connectivity on biological indicators used for paleoclimate reconstruction. Sediment cores from two lakes were examined using paleolimnological methods in the Mackenzie Uplands region northeast of Inuvik, N.W.T. For each lake, subfossil chironomids and elemental and isotopic carbon and nitrogen were analyzed. These data were then used in a chironomid paleotemperature model for reconstructing past temperature. ...
format Dataset
author Medeiros, Andrew
Niemeyer, Alannah
Todd, Anthony
Wolfe, Brent
spellingShingle Medeiros, Andrew
Niemeyer, Alannah
Todd, Anthony
Wolfe, Brent
Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...
author_facet Medeiros, Andrew
Niemeyer, Alannah
Todd, Anthony
Wolfe, Brent
author_sort Medeiros, Andrew
title Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...
title_short Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...
title_full Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...
title_fullStr Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...
title_full_unstemmed Identifying the Influence of Terrestrial-aquatic Connectivity on Paleoecological Inferences of Past Climate in Arctic lakes ...
title_sort identifying the influence of terrestrial-aquatic connectivity on paleoecological inferences of past climate in arctic lakes ...
publisher Canadian Cryospheric Information Network
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.21963/13241
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch?doi_id=13241
genre Inuvik
Northwest Territories
permafrost
Subarctic
genre_facet Inuvik
Northwest Territories
permafrost
Subarctic
op_doi https://doi.org/10.21963/13241
_version_ 1810452916785381376