Precipitation driven decadal scale decline and recovery of wetlands of Lake Pannon during the Tortonian

High resolution pollen and dinoflagellate analyses were performed on a continuous 98-cm-long core from Tortonian deposits of Lake Pannon in the Styrian Basin in Austria. The sample distance of 1-cm corresponds to a resolution of roughly one decade, allowing insights into environmental and climatic c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 2012-02, Vol.317-318 (1-2), p.1-12
Hauptverfasser: Kern, Andrea K., Harzhauser, Mathias, Soliman, Ali, Piller, Werner E., Gross, Martin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:High resolution pollen and dinoflagellate analyses were performed on a continuous 98-cm-long core from Tortonian deposits of Lake Pannon in the Styrian Basin in Austria. The sample distance of 1-cm corresponds to a resolution of roughly one decade, allowing insights into environmental and climatic changes over a millennium of Late Miocene time. Shifts in lake level, surface water productivity on a decadal- to centennial-scale can be explained by variations of rainfall during the Tortonian climatic optimum. Related to negative fine scale shifts of mean annual precipitation, shoreline vegetation belts reacted in an immediate replacement of Poaceae by Cyperaceae as dominant grasses in the marshes fringing the lake. In contrast to such near-synchronous ecosystem-responses to precipitation, a delayed lake level rise of 4–6decades is evident in the hydrological budget of Lake Pannon. This transgression, caused by a precipitation increase up to >1200mm/yr, resulted in a complete dieback of marshes. Simultaneously, “open-water” dinoflagellates, such as Impagidinium, took over in the brackish lagoon and fresh water dinoflagellates disappeared. As soon as the rainfall switched back to moderate levels of ~1100–1200mm/yr, the rise of the lake level slowed down, the marsh plants could keep up again and the former vegetation belts became re-established. Thus, mean annual precipitation, more than temperature, was the main driving force for high-frequency fluctuations in the Tortonian wetlands and surface water conditions of Lake Pannon. Such high resolution studies focusing on Tortonian decadal to centennial climate change will be crucial to test climate models which try to compare the Tortonian models with predictions for future climate change. ► High-resolution analyses were performed on a Late Miocene lake-sediment core. ► Pollen and dinoflagellates suggest lake–land-interlinkage on a decadal scale. ► Small variations in mean annual rainfall caused swift environmental changes. ► Miocene climate variability is detected on a scale comparable to Holocene records.
ISSN:0031-0182
1872-616X
DOI:10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.11.021