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Publication Details
AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS
SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH
agricultural and biological sciences
Relationships between trophic state, paleosalinity and climatic changes during the first Holocene marine transgression in Rocha Lagoon, southern Uruguay
Journal of Paleolimnology, Volume 35, No. 4, Year 2006
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Description
Paleolimnological data are presented on trophic development, climatic change and sea level variations in Rocha Lagoon, a 72 km2 coastal lagoon in southern Uruguay. Using a sediment core that extended from 7000 to about 3700 yr BP, analyses of organic matter, carbonate, diatoms and chrysophyte cysts were used to track the early Holocene paleolimnological conditions of Rocha Lagoon. Opal phytoliths were also counted and identified, both temperature and humidity indices were calculated, and Opal Phytolith Association Zones (OPAZ) were identified by performing Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCO). Diatom Association Zones (DAZ) corresponding to marine/brackish and brackish/freshwater episodes were closely related to changes in trophic state. Those DAZ representing marine/brackish stages exhibited a lower trophic state than those DAZ dominated by brackish and freshwater diatoms. This highlights that during the first Holocene marine transgression, Rocha Lagoon did not continuously exhibit marine/brackish conditions as reported in previous papers. Instead, three brackish/freshwater episodes related to sea level variation and changes in humidity were identified. The first episode, by ∼6000 yr BP, was related to sea level change as no significant changes in either temperature or humidity indices were observed. The second episode, between 5000 and 4400 yr BP, was related to both a sea level decrease and an increase in humidity, as a transition from humid to very humid climate was inferred. Concomitant decreases in salinity and increases in trophic state were also observed. The third episode, after ~4000 yr BP, was related to the end of the first Holocene regressive phase when sea level was slightly below present levels. Further decreases in salinity and increases in trophic state were detected. The paleoclimatic trends inferred in this study were in close agreement with other regional studies on climatic change, as cool temperatures were inferred. However, major changes in humidity were also detected. A humid to very humid climate was inferred for ~7000-4500 yr BP, but the occurrence of a semiarid/arid climate was inferred for ~4500-3700 yr BP. Our data suggest that during transgressive and regressive events there might be higher frequency and lower amplitude sea level oscillations that might lead to changes in salinity and trophic state of coastal aquatic systems. Such oscillations could only be tracked by high resolution analyses of sedimentary records and could be best interpreted with complementary data on paleoclimate. In addition, microfossils such as diatoms and opal phytoliths were shown to be very sensitive to such paleoenvironmental changes. © Springer 2006.
Authors & Co-Authors
Inda, Hugo
Uruguay, Montevideo
Facultad de Ciencias
García-Rodríguez, Felipe
South Africa, Gqeberha
Nelson Mandela University
del Puerto, L.
Uruguay, Montevideo
Facultad de Ciencias
Acevedo, V.
Uruguay, Montevideo
Facultad de Ciencias
Metzeltin, D.
Germany, Frankfurt am Main
Goethe-universität Frankfurt am Main
Castiñeira, Carola
Uruguay, Montevideo
División Antropología - Museos Naturales de Historia Natural y Antropología
Bracco Boksar, Roberto
Uruguay, Montevideo
Universidad de la República Facultad de Química
Adams, Janine B.
South Africa, Gqeberha
Nelson Mandela University
Statistics
Citations: 36
Authors: 8
Affiliations: 5
Identifiers
Doi:
10.1007/s10933-005-4841-7
ISSN:
09212728
Research Areas
Environmental