Large Lakes Observatory (LLO), University of Minnesota Duluth (UMD), Duluth, Minnesota 55812, USA.
Department of Biology, UMD, Duluth, Minnesota 55812, USA.
Nat Commun. 2017 Jun 9;8:15713. doi: 10.1038/ncomms15713.
Anthropogenic climate change has the potential to alter many facets of Earth's freshwater resources, especially lacustrine ecosystems. The effects of anthropogenic changes in Lake Superior, which is Earth's largest freshwater lake by area, are not well documented (spatially or temporally) and predicted future states in response to climate change vary. Here we show that Lake Superior experienced a slow, steady increase in production throughout the Holocene using (paleo)productivity proxies in lacustrine sediments to reconstruct past changes in primary production. Furthermore, data from the last century indicate a rapid increase in primary production, which we attribute to increasing surface water temperatures and longer seasonal stratification related to longer ice-free periods in Lake Superior due to anthropogenic climate warming. These observations demonstrate that anthropogenic effects have become a prominent influence on one of Earth's largest, most pristine lacustrine ecosystems.
人为气候变化有可能改变地球淡水资源的许多方面,尤其是湖泊生态系统。人类活动对苏必利尔湖的影响(在空间和时间上)记录不佳,而且针对气候变化的预测未来状态也各不相同。本研究利用湖泊沉积物中的(古)生产力示踪剂来重建过去初级生产力的变化,结果表明苏必利尔湖在整个全新世经历了缓慢而稳定的生产力增长。此外,上个世纪的数据表明初级生产力的快速增长,我们将其归因于由于人为气候变暖导致苏必利尔湖表面水温升高和更长的无冰期导致季节性分层时间延长。这些观测结果表明,人为影响已经成为地球最大、最原始的湖泊生态系统之一的主要影响因素。