Contrasting ecosystem responses to climatic events and human activity revealed by a sedimentary record from Lake Yilong, southwestern China

Global climate change and human activities have significantly impacted lake ecosystems at an accelerating rate in recent decades, but the differences between the responses of lake ecosystems to these two stressors remain unclear. Thus an improved understanding of the long-term influences of climatic...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2021-08, Vol.783, p.146922, Article 146922
Hauptverfasser: Yuan, Zijie, Wu, Duo, Niu, Lili, Ma, Xuyi, Li, Youmo, Hillman, Aubrey L., Abbott, Mark B., Zhou, Aifeng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Global climate change and human activities have significantly impacted lake ecosystems at an accelerating rate in recent decades, but the differences between the responses of lake ecosystems to these two stressors remain unclear. Thus an improved understanding of the long-term influences of climatic and anthropogenic disturbances is necessary for the management of lake ecosystems. In order to address these issues, a sedimentary record was obtained from Lake Yilong in Yunnan Province in southwestern China, where the climate and natural environment are dominated by the Indian Summer Monsoon and there is a long history of human occupation and intensive human activity. The chronology is based on AMS 14C dates from 13 samples of plant macrofossils and charcoal, which show that the record spans the last ~12,000 yr. Geochemical indices were used to reconstruct hydro-climatic variations and lake ecosystem responses. The results indicate that a cold and humid climate prevailed from the late Pleistocene to the beginning of the Holocene, which was interrupted by an abrupt decrease in precipitation during 9.7–8.7 ka (1 ka = 1000 cal yr BP, corresponding to the 9.3 ka event). A persistent drying trend occurred during the middle and late Holocene, and there was an increase in the intensity of human activity during the past 1500 years. A comparison of the effects of a natural climatic event and human disturbance reveals contrasting lake ecosystem responses. The lake ecosystem was resilient to the 9.3 ka event and subsequently recovered; however, long-term human activity in the watershed, including deforestation and cultivation, reduced the stability of the lake ecosystem and positive feedback effects were strengthened, leading to the deviation of the system far from its previous stable state. It is concluded that, compared to climate change, human activities have had a much more serious impact on lake ecosystem. [Display omitted] •Lacustrine record of environmental change over the last 12 ka from southwestern China•Ecosystem was impacted by the 9.3 ka climate event and by human activity after 1.5 ka.•Lake ecosystem was resilient in the face of a climatic perturbation.•Human activities had an irreversible impact on the lake ecosystem.•Greater impact of human activity on the lake ecosystem compared to climate change
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146922