Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Traces of sunlight in carbon biochemistry of shallow subarctic lakes

View through CrossRef
<p>Sunlight fuels the drawdown and evasion of carbon in shallow northern lakes. Amplified polar warming is altering the sunlit transport and transformation of aquatic carbon at an alarming rate entailing potential for climate feedbacks. We combined experimental and retrospective approaches to explore the synoptic interlinks between underwater light, aquatic carbon biochemistry, landscape carbon cycling and climate change in two shallow subarctic lakes with divergent light and carbon regime (a clear lake low in organic carbon and a dark organic rich lake). In situ enclosures (treatments under full sunlight, sunlight without the ultraviolet [UV] spectrum, no light) were first deployed on the lakes to decipher the effect of photochemical alteration on the spectral, elemental and isotopic properties of lake water organic carbon pools under short term (four weeks) exposure. We then focused on elemental, isotopic and spectral fingerprints archived in the sediments of the lakes to trace coeval variability in aquatic primary production, terrestrial carbon transport, and underwater light under centennial climate fluctuations. We observed distinct differences in carbon biochemistry between the experimental treatments illustrating the importance of sunlight, and particularly the UV spectrum, in shaping the carbon pools of the lakes already over short time scales. Over the past centennia, sediment biogeochemical composition carried signatures of change in carbon origins (algal vs terrestrial) and shifting underwater light regime. The results shed light on how climate change and sunlight shape carbon flows in shallow northern lakes over short and long time scales.</p>
Title: Traces of sunlight in carbon biochemistry of shallow subarctic lakes
Description:
<p>Sunlight fuels the drawdown and evasion of carbon in shallow northern lakes.
Amplified polar warming is altering the sunlit transport and transformation of aquatic carbon at an alarming rate entailing potential for climate feedbacks.
We combined experimental and retrospective approaches to explore the synoptic interlinks between underwater light, aquatic carbon biochemistry, landscape carbon cycling and climate change in two shallow subarctic lakes with divergent light and carbon regime (a clear lake low in organic carbon and a dark organic rich lake).
In situ enclosures (treatments under full sunlight, sunlight without the ultraviolet [UV] spectrum, no light) were first deployed on the lakes to decipher the effect of photochemical alteration on the spectral, elemental and isotopic properties of lake water organic carbon pools under short term (four weeks) exposure.
We then focused on elemental, isotopic and spectral fingerprints archived in the sediments of the lakes to trace coeval variability in aquatic primary production, terrestrial carbon transport, and underwater light under centennial climate fluctuations.
We observed distinct differences in carbon biochemistry between the experimental treatments illustrating the importance of sunlight, and particularly the UV spectrum, in shaping the carbon pools of the lakes already over short time scales.
Over the past centennia, sediment biogeochemical composition carried signatures of change in carbon origins (algal vs terrestrial) and shifting underwater light regime.
The results shed light on how climate change and sunlight shape carbon flows in shallow northern lakes over short and long time scales.
</p>.

Related Results

Measures to Combat Offshore Artie Oil Spills
Measures to Combat Offshore Artie Oil Spills
Abstract This paper is based on a portion of a continuous current-awareness literature survey on the varied facets of the overall problems of pollution by oil spi...
Anticipating future ice-dammed lakes across High Mountain Asia
Anticipating future ice-dammed lakes across High Mountain Asia
<p>Over recent decades, a significant increase in the amount and the size of glacier lakes has been observed. These lakes enhance glacier mass loss but also present s...
Saline systems of the Great Plains of western Canada: an overview of the limnogeology and paleolimnology
Saline systems of the Great Plains of western Canada: an overview of the limnogeology and paleolimnology
AbstractIn much of the northern Great Plains, saline and hypersaline lacustrine brines are the only surface waters present. As a group, the lakes of this region are unique: there i...
Transformation of ecosystems glacial lakes in Ukrainian Carpathians
Transformation of ecosystems glacial lakes in Ukrainian Carpathians
The sizes of glacial lakes of the Ukrainian Carpathians without surface water runoff (Brebeneskul, Nesamovyte – the last 130 years, Verhne Ozirne, Nyzhne Ozirne – the last 50 years...
Characterization of bacterial community dynamics dominated by salinity in lakes of the Inner Mongolian Plateau, China
Characterization of bacterial community dynamics dominated by salinity in lakes of the Inner Mongolian Plateau, China
Microorganisms in lakes are sensitive to salinity fluctuations. Despite extensive prior research on bacterial communities, our understanding of their characteristics and assembly m...
Mitigation through restoration: reducing carbon gas emissions in alpine lakes
Mitigation through restoration: reducing carbon gas emissions in alpine lakes
Lakes play a significant role in the global carbon cycle by transforming, burying, emitting, and transporting carbon from terrestrial ecosystems to the ocean. Carbon is emitted pri...
Variation characteristics of mesoscale lakes in the Tibetan Plateau
Variation characteristics of mesoscale lakes in the Tibetan Plateau
Known as “Water Tower of Asia”, the Tibetan Plateau (TP) is widely distributed with numerous inflow lakes. Lakes on the TP are less affected by human actives an...
Limnological features of lakes on the Sepik-Ramu floodplain, Papua New Guinea
Limnological features of lakes on the Sepik-Ramu floodplain, Papua New Guinea
The Sepik-Ramu floodplain is one of the major wetland areas in south-eastem Asia. This paper reports preliminary limnological data on 26 lakes on the lower and middle reaches of th...

Back to Top