TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental change over the last millennium recorded in two contrasting crater lakes in western Uganda, eastern Africa (Lakes Kasenda and Wandakara)
AU - Ryves, David B.
AU - Mills, Keely
AU - Bennike, Ole
AU - Brodersen, Klaus Peter
AU - Lamb, Angela L.
AU - Leng, Melanie J.
AU - Russell, James M.
AU - Ssemmanda, Immaculate
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by DANIDA (Denmark; project 91006) and supported by NERC (UK) within a New Investigators’ Competition award (NE/D000157/1). Isotopic analyses were carried out at the NERC Isotope Geosciences Laboratory under award IP/884/1105. Fieldwork in Uganda was supported by the Department of Geology at Makerere University, and Makerere University Biological Field Station. We thank Mr. Abdullah Mangalji for his hospitality in allowing access to Lake Kasenda; Jonathon St. Hill Cox and Menno Bouma for help in the field; Uganda National Council for Science and Technology (permit EC482), Uganda Wildlife Authority and the Office of the President for fieldwork permission; Lauren & Colin Chapman, Dirk Verschuren and the late Henry Osmaston for logistical help. We thank Christine Cocquyt (National Botanical Gardens, Belgium) for valuable discussion on diatom taxonomy and ecology, and David Taylor and an anonymous reviewer for many helpful and stimulating comments, all of which have improved the paper.
PY - 2011/3
Y1 - 2011/3
N2 - The last millennium is a key period for understanding environmental change in eastern Africa, as there is clear evidence of marked fluctuations in climate (effective moisture) that place modern concern with future climate change in a proper context, both in terms of environmental and societal impacts and responses. Here, we compare sediment records from two small, nearby, closed crater lakes in western Uganda (Lake Kasenda and Lake Wandakara), spanning the last 700 (Wandakara) and 1200 years (Kasenda) respectively. Multiproxy analyses of chemical sedimentary parameters (including C/N ratios, δ13C of bulk organic matter and δ13C and δ18O of authigenic carbonates) and biotic remains (diatoms, aquatic macrofossils, chironomids) suggest that Kasenda has been sensitive to climate over much of this period, and has shown substantial fluctuations in conductivity, while Wandakara has a more muted response, likely due to the increasing dominance of human activity as a driver of change within the lake and catchment over the length of our record. Evidence from both records, however, supports the idea that lake levels were low from ~AD 700-1000 AD, with increasing aridity from AD 1100-1600, and brief wet phases around AD 1000 and 1400. Wetter conditions are recorded in the 1700s, but drought returned by the end of the century and into the early 1800s, becoming wetter again from the mid-1800s. Comparison with other records across eastern Africa suggests that while some events are widespread (e.g. aridity beginning ~ AD 1100), at other times there is a more complex spatial signature (e.g. in the 1200s to 1300s, and from the 1400s to 1600s). This study highlights the important role of catchment-specific factors (e.g. lakemorphometry, catchment size, and human impact) in modulating the sensitivity of proxies, and lake records, as indicators of environmental change, and potential hazards when regional inference is based on a single site or proxy.
AB - The last millennium is a key period for understanding environmental change in eastern Africa, as there is clear evidence of marked fluctuations in climate (effective moisture) that place modern concern with future climate change in a proper context, both in terms of environmental and societal impacts and responses. Here, we compare sediment records from two small, nearby, closed crater lakes in western Uganda (Lake Kasenda and Lake Wandakara), spanning the last 700 (Wandakara) and 1200 years (Kasenda) respectively. Multiproxy analyses of chemical sedimentary parameters (including C/N ratios, δ13C of bulk organic matter and δ13C and δ18O of authigenic carbonates) and biotic remains (diatoms, aquatic macrofossils, chironomids) suggest that Kasenda has been sensitive to climate over much of this period, and has shown substantial fluctuations in conductivity, while Wandakara has a more muted response, likely due to the increasing dominance of human activity as a driver of change within the lake and catchment over the length of our record. Evidence from both records, however, supports the idea that lake levels were low from ~AD 700-1000 AD, with increasing aridity from AD 1100-1600, and brief wet phases around AD 1000 and 1400. Wetter conditions are recorded in the 1700s, but drought returned by the end of the century and into the early 1800s, becoming wetter again from the mid-1800s. Comparison with other records across eastern Africa suggests that while some events are widespread (e.g. aridity beginning ~ AD 1100), at other times there is a more complex spatial signature (e.g. in the 1200s to 1300s, and from the 1400s to 1600s). This study highlights the important role of catchment-specific factors (e.g. lakemorphometry, catchment size, and human impact) in modulating the sensitivity of proxies, and lake records, as indicators of environmental change, and potential hazards when regional inference is based on a single site or proxy.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79952037767&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.11.011
DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.11.011
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 30
SP - 555
EP - 569
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
IS - 5-6
ER -