Arid
DOI10.1007/s10933-005-2422-4
Paleolimnological investigations of anthropogenic environmental change in Lake Tanganyika: IX. Summary of paleorecords of environmental change and catchment deforestation at Lake Tanganyika and impacts on the Lake Tanganyika ecosystem
Cohen, AS; Palacios-Fest, MR; Msaky, ES; Alin, SR; McKee, B; O’Reilly, CM; Dettman, DL; Nkotagu, H; Lezzar, KE
通讯作者Cohen, AS
来源期刊JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY
ISSN0921-2728
出版年2005
卷号34期号:1页码:125-145
英文摘要

Paleorecords from multiple indicators of environmental change provide evidence for the interactions between climate, human alteration of watersheds and lake ecosystem processes at Lake Tanganyika, Africa, a lake renowned for its extraordinary biodiversity, endemism and fisheries. This paper synthesizes geo-chronology, sedimentology, paleoecology, geochemistry and hydrology studies comparing the history of deltaic deposits from watersheds of various sizes and deforestation disturbance levels along the eastern coast of the lake in Tanzania and Burundi. Intersite differences are related to climate change, differences in the histories of forested vs. deforested watersheds, differences related to regional patterns of deforestation, and differences related to interactions of deforestation and climate effects. Climate change is linked to variations in sediment accumulation rates, charcoal accumulation, lake level and water chemistry, especially during the arid-humid fluctuations of the latter part of the Little Ice Age. Differences between forested and deforested watersheds are manifested by major increases in sediment accumulation rates in the latter (outside the range of climatically driven variability and for the last ∼ 40 years unprecedented in comparison with other records from the lake in the late Holocene), differences in eroded sediment and watershed stream composition, and compositional or diversity trends in lake faunal communities related to sediment inundation. Variability in regional patterns of deforestation is illustrated by the timing of transitions from numerous sedimentologic, paleoecologic and geochemical indicators. These data suggest that extensive watershed deforestation occurred as early as the late-18th to the early-19th centuries in the northern part of the Lake Tanganyika catchment, in the late-19th to early-20th centuries in the northern parts of modern-day Tanzania, and in the mid-20th century in central Tanzania. Rapid increases in sediment and charcoal accumulation rates, palynological and lake faunal changes occurred in the early-1960s. We interpret this to be the result of greatly enhanced flushing of sediments in previously deforested watersheds triggered by extraordinary rainfall in 1961/62. Regional differences in deforestation histories can be understood in light of the very different cultural and demographic histories of the northern and central parts of the lake shoreline. Incursion of slaving and ivory caravans from the Indian Ocean to the central coast of Lake Tanganyika by the early-19th century, with their attendant diseases, reduced human and elephant populations and therefore maintained forest cover in this region through the late-19th to early-20th centuries. In contrast, the northeastern portion of the lakeshore did not experience the effects of the caravan trades and consequently experienced high human population densities and widespread deforestation much earlier. These studies demonstrate the importance of paleolimnological data for making informed risk assessments of the potential effects of watershed deforestation on long-term lake ecosystem response in the Lake Tanganyika catchment. Differences in sediment yield and lake floor distribution of that yield, linked to factors such as watershed size, slope, and sediment retention, must be accounted for in management plans for both human occupation of currently forested watersheds and the development of future underwater reserves.


英文关键词deforestation East Africa Lake level Lake Tanganyika Late Holocene soil erosion
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA ; Tanzania
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000229504500009
WOS关键词EAST-AFRICA ; LAND-USE ; HISTORY ; BIODIVERSITY ; STRATIGRAPHY ; HOLOCENE ; RAINFALL ; LEVEL
WOS类目Environmental Sciences ; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary ; Limnology
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Geology ; Marine & Freshwater Biology
来源机构University of Arizona
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/149757
作者单位(1)Univ Arizona, Dept Geosci, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA;(2)Terra Nostra, Tucson, AZ 85741 USA;(3)Tanzania Petr Dev Corp, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania;(4)Univ Washington, Sch Oceanog, Seattle, WA 98195 USA;(5)Tulane Univ, Dept Geol, New Orleans, LA 70118 USA;(6)Vassar Coll, Environm Sci Program, Poughkeepsie, NY 12604 USA;(7)Univ Dar Es Salaam, Dept Geol, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
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Cohen, AS,Palacios-Fest, MR,Msaky, ES,et al. Paleolimnological investigations of anthropogenic environmental change in Lake Tanganyika: IX. Summary of paleorecords of environmental change and catchment deforestation at Lake Tanganyika and impacts on the Lake Tanganyika ecosystem[J]. University of Arizona,2005,34(1):125-145.
APA Cohen, AS.,Palacios-Fest, MR.,Msaky, ES.,Alin, SR.,McKee, B.,...&Lezzar, KE.(2005).Paleolimnological investigations of anthropogenic environmental change in Lake Tanganyika: IX. Summary of paleorecords of environmental change and catchment deforestation at Lake Tanganyika and impacts on the Lake Tanganyika ecosystem.JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY,34(1),125-145.
MLA Cohen, AS,et al."Paleolimnological investigations of anthropogenic environmental change in Lake Tanganyika: IX. Summary of paleorecords of environmental change and catchment deforestation at Lake Tanganyika and impacts on the Lake Tanganyika ecosystem".JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY 34.1(2005):125-145.
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