Recent global warming induces the coupling of dissimilar long-term sedimentary signatures in two adjacent volcanic lakes (Azores Archipelago, Portugal)
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Paleolimnology Diatoms Fossil pigments Global warming Holocene climate Remote islands
Date
2023-01-30Referencia bibliográfica
David Vázquez-Loureiro... [et al.]. Recent global warming induces the coupling of dissimilar long-term sedimentary signatures in two adjacent volcanic lakes (Azores Archipelago, Portugal), Quaternary Science Reviews, Volume 303, 2023, 107968, ISSN 0277-3791, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.107968]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness projects PaleoNAO, RapidNAO and PaleoM-odes CGL 2010-15767 CGL 2013-40608-R; Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) PTDC/CTA-AMB/28 511/2017; Xunta de Galicia; European Social Fund (ESF); Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the Ramon y Cajal Scheme RYC 2020-029253-I; Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) DL57/2016/ICETA/EEC 2018/25; Universidade da Coruna/CISUGRésumé
Paleoclimatological information derived from the study of lacustrine sedimentary records is not only
biased by taphonomical processes but also by potential differences in the expression of climate variability
in the sediments due to site-specific factors. Using a multiproxy approach (the elemental and
isotopic compositions of organic matter, diatom assemblages, and marker pigments of algae and cyanobacteria),
we study the different environmental signatures recorded since the Little Ice Age (LIA) in the
sediments of two volcanic lakes located within the same caldera on S~ao Miguel Island (Azores Archipelago).
Lake Santiago is a crater lake whose eutrophic status in the last stage of the LIA was linked to
external nutrient inputs associated with this humid period. Its post-LIA evolution was forced by changes
in the thermal structure of the water, which determined its degree of mixing and therefore nutrient
availability through recycling from the hypolimnion. In contrast, the decadal to centennial limnological
evolution of Lake Azul, a caldera lake 2.5 km from Lake Santiago, shows geochemical and micropaleontological
signatures disconnected from climate variability until 1980/1990 CE due to its greater
exposure to the fallout of tephra after a catastrophic eruption in c. 1290 CE. Only after 1980/1990 CE did a
global warming scenario induce a common ecological restructuring of both lakes, involving the
replacement of turbulence-loving algal taxa by species adapted to strengthening water column stratification.
Nevertheless, this shift was relatively gradual in Lake Azul but more sudden in Lake Santiago,
indicating that the local site-specific components still had an effect on the expression of climate change
in the sediments. Despite the short history of anthropogenic pressure (compared to their continental
counterparts) and the large atmospheric patterns operating over the Azores Archipelago, the sedimentary
records of these two adjacent oceanic volcanic lakes reacted quite differently to climate changes.