The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka

© 2015. A sediment sequence was taken from a closed, high altitude lake (informal name Olive-backed Lake) in the central mountain range of Kamchatka, in the Russian Far East. The sequence was dated by radiocarbon and tephrochronology and used for multi-proxy analyses (chironomids, pollen, diatoms)....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Self A., Klimaschewski A., Solovieva N., Jones V., Andrén E., Andreev A., Hammarlund D., Brooks S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/102026
id ftkazanuniv:oai:dspace.kpfu.ru:net/102026
record_format openpolar
spelling ftkazanuniv:oai:dspace.kpfu.ru:net/102026 2023-05-15T13:15:10+02:00 The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka Self A. Klimaschewski A. Solovieva N. Jones V. Andrén E. Andreev A. Hammarlund D. Brooks S. 2014 http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/102026 unknown Global and Planetary Change 67 134 http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/bitstream/net/102026/1/SCOPUS09218181-2014-134-SID84947045198-p1.pdf 0921-8181 http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/102026 SCOPUS09218181-2014-134-SID84947045198 Chironomids Climate Diatoms Holocene Kamchatka Pollen Article 2014 ftkazanuniv 2022-01-01T09:35:32Z © 2015. A sediment sequence was taken from a closed, high altitude lake (informal name Olive-backed Lake) in the central mountain range of Kamchatka, in the Russian Far East. The sequence was dated by radiocarbon and tephrochronology and used for multi-proxy analyses (chironomids, pollen, diatoms). Although the evolution of Beringian climate through the Holocene is primarily driven by global forcing mechanisms, regional controls, such as volcanic activity or vegetation dynamics, lead to a spatial heterogeneous response. This study aims to reconstruct past changes in the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems and to separate the climate-driven response from a response to regional or localised environmental change. Radiocarbon dates from plant macrophytes gave a basal date of 7800 cal. yr BP. Coring terminated in a tephra layer, so sedimentation at the lake started prior to this date, possibly in the early Holocene following local glacier retreat. Initially the catchment vegetation was dominated by Betula and Alnus woodland with a mosaic of open, wet, aquatic and semi-aquatic habitats. Between 7800 and 6000 cal. yr BP the diatom-inferred lake water was pH. 4.4-5.3 and chironomid and diatom assemblages in the lake were initially dominated by a small number of acidophilic/acid tolerant taxa. The frequency of Pinus pumila (Siberian dwarf pine) pollen increased from 5000 cal. yr BP and threshold analysis indicates that P. pumila arrived in the catchment between 4200 and 3000 cal. yr BP. Its range expansion was probably mediated by strengthening of the Aleutian Low pressure system and increased winter snowfall. The diatom-inferred pH reconstructions show that after an initial period of low pH, pH gradually increased from 5500 cal. yr BP to pH. 5.8 at 1500 cal. yr BP. This trend of increasing pH through the Holocene is unusual in lake records, but the initially low pH may have resulted directly or indirectly from intense regional volcanic activity during the mid-Holocene. The chironomid-inferred July temperature reconstruction suggests cool periods between 3200-2800. cal. yr BP and 1100-700. cal. yr BP and a warmer period between 2800 and 1100 cal. yr BP. Chironomid and diatom DCA scores decline from ca. 6000 cal. yr BP, indicating compositional changes in these aquatic assemblages. In comparison declines in pollen PCA scores are delayed, starting ca. 5100 cal. yr BP. The results suggest that while catchment vegetation was responding primarily to climate change, the biota within the lake and lake water chemistry were responding to localised environmental conditions. Article in Journal/Newspaper aleutian low Kamchatka Kazan Federal University Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Kazan Federal University Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftkazanuniv
language unknown
topic Chironomids
Climate
Diatoms
Holocene
Kamchatka
Pollen
spellingShingle Chironomids
Climate
Diatoms
Holocene
Kamchatka
Pollen
Self A.
Klimaschewski A.
Solovieva N.
Jones V.
Andrén E.
Andreev A.
Hammarlund D.
Brooks S.
The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka
topic_facet Chironomids
Climate
Diatoms
Holocene
Kamchatka
Pollen
description © 2015. A sediment sequence was taken from a closed, high altitude lake (informal name Olive-backed Lake) in the central mountain range of Kamchatka, in the Russian Far East. The sequence was dated by radiocarbon and tephrochronology and used for multi-proxy analyses (chironomids, pollen, diatoms). Although the evolution of Beringian climate through the Holocene is primarily driven by global forcing mechanisms, regional controls, such as volcanic activity or vegetation dynamics, lead to a spatial heterogeneous response. This study aims to reconstruct past changes in the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems and to separate the climate-driven response from a response to regional or localised environmental change. Radiocarbon dates from plant macrophytes gave a basal date of 7800 cal. yr BP. Coring terminated in a tephra layer, so sedimentation at the lake started prior to this date, possibly in the early Holocene following local glacier retreat. Initially the catchment vegetation was dominated by Betula and Alnus woodland with a mosaic of open, wet, aquatic and semi-aquatic habitats. Between 7800 and 6000 cal. yr BP the diatom-inferred lake water was pH. 4.4-5.3 and chironomid and diatom assemblages in the lake were initially dominated by a small number of acidophilic/acid tolerant taxa. The frequency of Pinus pumila (Siberian dwarf pine) pollen increased from 5000 cal. yr BP and threshold analysis indicates that P. pumila arrived in the catchment between 4200 and 3000 cal. yr BP. Its range expansion was probably mediated by strengthening of the Aleutian Low pressure system and increased winter snowfall. The diatom-inferred pH reconstructions show that after an initial period of low pH, pH gradually increased from 5500 cal. yr BP to pH. 5.8 at 1500 cal. yr BP. This trend of increasing pH through the Holocene is unusual in lake records, but the initially low pH may have resulted directly or indirectly from intense regional volcanic activity during the mid-Holocene. The chironomid-inferred July temperature reconstruction suggests cool periods between 3200-2800. cal. yr BP and 1100-700. cal. yr BP and a warmer period between 2800 and 1100 cal. yr BP. Chironomid and diatom DCA scores decline from ca. 6000 cal. yr BP, indicating compositional changes in these aquatic assemblages. In comparison declines in pollen PCA scores are delayed, starting ca. 5100 cal. yr BP. The results suggest that while catchment vegetation was responding primarily to climate change, the biota within the lake and lake water chemistry were responding to localised environmental conditions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Self A.
Klimaschewski A.
Solovieva N.
Jones V.
Andrén E.
Andreev A.
Hammarlund D.
Brooks S.
author_facet Self A.
Klimaschewski A.
Solovieva N.
Jones V.
Andrén E.
Andreev A.
Hammarlund D.
Brooks S.
author_sort Self A.
title The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka
title_short The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka
title_full The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka
title_fullStr The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka
title_full_unstemmed The relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on Holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central Kamchatka
title_sort relative influences of climate and volcanic activity on holocene lake development inferred from a mountain lake in central kamchatka
publishDate 2014
url http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/102026
genre aleutian low
Kamchatka
genre_facet aleutian low
Kamchatka
op_source SCOPUS09218181-2014-134-SID84947045198
op_relation Global and Planetary Change
67
134
http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/bitstream/net/102026/1/SCOPUS09218181-2014-134-SID84947045198-p1.pdf
0921-8181
http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/102026
_version_ 1766267250125307904