Diatom responses and geochemical feedbacks to environmental changes at Lake Rauchuagytgyn (Far East Russian Arctic)

This study is based on multiproxy data gained from a 14C-dated 6.5 m long sediment core and a 210Pb-dated 23 cm short core retrieved from Lake Rauchuagytgyn in Chukotka, Arctic Russia. The main objectives are to reconstruct the environmental history and ecological development of the lake during the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Biskaborn, Boris K., Forster, Amy, Pfalz, Gregor, Pestryakova, Lyudmila A., Stoof-Leichsenring, Kathleen, Strauss, Jens, Kröger, Tim, Herzschuh, Ulrike
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2022-985
https://noa.gwlb.de/receive/cop_mods_00062777
https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/egusphere-2022-985/egusphere-2022-985.pdf
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Summary:This study is based on multiproxy data gained from a 14C-dated 6.5 m long sediment core and a 210Pb-dated 23 cm short core retrieved from Lake Rauchuagytgyn in Chukotka, Arctic Russia. The main objectives are to reconstruct the environmental history and ecological development of the lake during the last 29k years and to investigate the main drivers behind bioproduction shifts. The methods comprise age-modeling and accumulation rate estimation, light-microscope diatom species analysis (74 samples), organic carbon, nitrogen, and mercury analysis. Diatoms have appeared in the lake since 21.8 cal ka BP and are dominated by planktonic Lindavia ocellata and L. cyclopuncta. Around the Pleistocene-Holocene boundary, other taxa including planktonic Aulacoseira and benthic fragilarioid (Staurosira) and achnanthoid species increase in their abundance. There is strong correlation between variations of diatom valve accumulation rates (DAR, mean 176.1 109 valves m2 a1), organic carbon accumulation rates (OCAR, mean 4.6 g m-2 a-1), and mercury accumulation rates (HgAR, mean 63.4 µg m-2 a-1). We discuss the environmental forcings behind shifts in diatom species and found responses of key-taxa to the cold glacial period, postglacial warming, Younger Dryas, and the Holocene Thermal Maximum. The short core data likely suggest recent change of the diatom community at 1907 CE related to human-induced environmental change. Significant correlation between DAR and OCAR in the Holocene interglacial indicates within-lake bioproduction as the main source of carbon deposited in the lake sediment. During both glacial and interglacial episodes HgAR is mainly bound to organic matter in the lake associated to biochemical substrate conditions. There were only ambiguous signs of increased HgAR during the industrialization period. We conclude that pristine Arctic lake systems can serve as CO2 and Hg sinks during warming climate driven by insolation-enhanced within-lake primary productivity. Maintaining intact natural lake ecosystems should ...