Geology & Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA.
Sci Rep. 2012;2:582. doi: 10.1038/srep00582. Epub 2012 Aug 30.
Over the last century humans have altered the export of fluvial materials leading to significant changes in morphology, chemistry, and biology of the coastal ocean. Here we present sedimentary, paleoenvironmental and paleogenetic evidence to show that the Black Sea, a nearly enclosed marine basin, was affected by land use long before the changes of the Industrial Era. Although watershed hydroclimate was spatially and temporally variable over the last ~3000 years, surface salinity dropped systematically in the Black Sea. Sediment loads delivered by Danube River, the main tributary of the Black Sea, significantly increased as land use intensified in the last two millennia, which led to a rapid expansion of its delta. Lastly, proliferation of diatoms and dinoflagellates over the last five to six centuries, when intensive deforestation occurred in Eastern Europe, points to an anthropogenic pulse of river-borne nutrients that radically transformed the food web structure in the Black Sea.
在过去的一个世纪里,人类改变了河流物质的输出,导致了沿海海洋形态、化学和生物学的重大变化。在这里,我们提出了沉积学、古环境和古遗传学证据,表明黑海这个几乎封闭的海洋盆地早在工业时代的变化之前就受到了土地利用的影响。尽管过去 3000 年来流域水文气候在空间和时间上存在变化,但黑海的表面盐度却在系统下降。作为黑海主要支流的多瑙河输送的泥沙负荷在过去两千年来随着土地利用的加强而显著增加,这导致了其三角洲的迅速扩张。最后,过去五到六百年间,当东欧发生大规模森林砍伐时,硅藻和甲藻的大量繁殖表明,河流携带的营养物质的人为脉冲,彻底改变了黑海的食物网结构。