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人为气候变化改变了内华达山脉(美国加利福尼亚州)的湖泊状态。

Anthropogenic climate change has altered lake state in the Sierra Nevada (California, USA).

机构信息

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.

Department of Earth and Environmental Systems, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Indiana, USA.

出版信息

Glob Chang Biol. 2021 Dec;27(23):6059-6070. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15843. Epub 2021 Sep 8.

Abstract

Climatic changes threaten freshwater resources and aquatic ecosystem health in the Sierra Nevada (California, USA), which has important consequences for millions of people and the world's fifth largest economy. However, the timing and magnitude of ecological changes driven by hydroclimate oscillations remain poorly understood in California's headwater region. Here, we develop a precisely dated, annually to decadally resolved lake sediment record of ecological change from the eastern Sierra Nevada that spans the last three millennia. Diatom paleoecology reveals a detailed history of abrupt limnologic transitions, best explained by modifications in water column stratification, mixing, and nutrient status in response to changing seasonality. Seasonally stratified conditions were registered during the Late Holocene Dry Period and the Medieval Climate Anomaly, illustrating the sensitivity of fossil diatoms to well-known periods of drought. Yet the most striking feature of the record is the uniqueness of ~1840-2016 CE: a period of singularly strong water column stratification, increased algal diversity, and reduced diatom productivity consistent with unprecedented "hot droughts." The data demonstrate that hot-dry conditions of the Industrial Era altered lake state to conditions unseen in the past ~3180 years, and suggest that regional trends identified by historical monitoring began far earlier than previously recognized. Our record illustrates the profound influence of anthropogenic climate warming on high-elevation lakes and the ecosystem services they provide in the Sierra Nevada, which hold implications for water quality and availability in California.

摘要

气候变化威胁到内华达山脉(美国加利福尼亚州)的淡水资源和水生态系统健康,这对数百万人和全球第五大经济体都有着重要的影响。然而,在加利福尼亚州的源头地区,由水文气候波动驱动的生态变化的时间和规模仍不甚清楚。在这里,我们开发了一种精确定年、每年到十年分辨率的内华达山脉东部湖泊沉积物记录,该记录涵盖了过去三千年。硅藻古生态学揭示了急剧的湖沼学转变的详细历史,这可以通过水柱分层、混合和营养状态的变化来解释,这些变化是对季节性变化的响应。在全新世干旱期和中世纪气候异常期间,季节性分层条件得到了记录,这说明了化石硅藻对众所周知的干旱期的敏感性。然而,记录中最引人注目的特征是 1840-2016 年的独特性:水柱分层强烈、藻类多样性增加和硅藻生产力降低的时期,与前所未有的“热干旱”一致。这些数据表明,工业时代的热干条件改变了湖泊的状态,使其达到了过去 3180 年未见的状态,并表明历史监测中确定的区域趋势比以前认识到的要早得多。我们的记录说明了人为气候变暖对高海拔湖泊及其在内华达山脉提供的生态系统服务的深远影响,这对加利福尼亚州的水质和可用性有着影响。

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