viernes, 28 de mayo de 2010

RV: Late-twentieth-century warming in Lake Tanganyika unprecedented since AD 500

 

 

Fuente: Nature Geoscience - Issue - nature.com science feeds
Expuesto el: domingo, 16 de mayo de 2010 2:00
Autor: Jessica E. Tierney
Asunto: Late-twentieth-century warming in Lake Tanganyika unprecedented since AD 500

 

Late-twentieth-century warming in Lake Tanganyika unprecedented since AD 500

Nature Geoscience 3, 422 (2010). doi:10.1038/ngeo865

Authors: Jessica E. Tierney, Marc T. Mayes, Natacha Meyer, Christopher Johnson, Peter W. Swarzenski, Andrew S. Cohen & James M. Russell

Instrumental observations suggest that Lake Tanganyika, the largest rift lake in East Africa, has become warmer, increasingly stratified and less productive over the past 90years (refs 1,2). These trends have been attributed to anthropogenic climate change. However, it remains unclear whether the decrease in productivity is linked to the temperature rise, and whether the twentieth-century trends are anomalous within the context of longer-term variability. Here, we use the TEX86 temperature proxy, the weight per cent of biogenic silica and charcoal abundance from Lake Tanganyika sediment cores to reconstruct lake-surface temperature, productivity and regional wildfire frequency, respectively, for the past 1,500years. We detect a negative correlation between lake-surface temperature and primary productivity, and our estimates of fire frequency, and hence humidity, preclude decreased nutrient input through runoff as a cause for observed periods of low productivity. We suggest that, throughout the past 1,500years, rising lake-surface temperatures increased the stratification of the lake water column, preventing nutrient recharge from below and limiting primary productivity. Our records indicate that changes in the temperature of Lake Tanganyika in the past few decades exceed previous natural variability. We conclude that these unprecedented temperatures and a corresponding decrease in productivity can be attributed to anthropogenic global warming, with potentially important implications for the Lake Tanganyika fishery.


Ver artículo...

Archivo del blog