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Dan Hammarlund

Dan Hammarlund

Professor

Dan Hammarlund

Implications of land use on the carbon cycle - Impacts of long-term human activities on terrestrial organic matter input to aquatic ecosystems in southern Sweden

Author

  • Bingjie Yang

Summary, in English

Human activities have a huge impact on the carbon cycle by modifying the landscape. Vegetation cover changes attributed to forest clearance and the expansion of agricultural land increases soil erosion, organic matter and other nutrient delivery from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystems. Long-term records of environmental variation at centennial to millennial time scales are essential for the assessment of ecosystem dynamics in response to early and recent anthropogenic disturbances. Such records can be obtained from well-dated lake sediments, which consist of chronologically deposited materials originating from both within the water body (e.g. organic matter from macrophytes and planktonic algae) and the catchment area (e.g. soil organic matter, plant detritus, pollen and minerogenic material). Multi-proxy analysis of continuous sediment sequences allows us to reconstruct the palaeoenvironment and subsequently investigate aquatic ecosystem response to human activities.
In this thesis, we carried out multi-proxy analyses to four sediment sequences from different environmental settings in southern Sweden to explore the variability in organic matter transport between terrestrial and aquatic environments in response to long-term land-use changes. The pollen-based Landscape Reconstruction Algorithm was applied to quantitatively reconstruct the catchment-scale landscape dynamics. Lignin phenols (biomarker) were used to trace the terrestrial organic matter preserved in the sediments. Bulk geochemistry including TOC, C/N ratio and BSi was applied for a general assessment of the proportions of terrestrial and aquatic organic matter deposition and estimation of aquatic production. Ti within the XRF data set was used to assess soil erosion.

The study on two sediment sequences from a small forest lake (Lake Skottenesjön) in southwestern Sweden shows that the terrestrial organic matter delivery is sensitive to local land-use variations in the catchment in the past 1000 years. Elevated soil erosion and increased terrestrial organic matter deposition were recorded during intensive wood harvest in the 18th and 19th centuries. No significant change in terrestrial organic matter delivery was observed during the farmland expansion between the 12th and mid-14th century. Export of terrestrial organic and minerogenic matter to the lake was much higher during the period of modern forestry in the 20th century than the period of minor forest disturbance in the 11th century. A similar multi-proxy study was conducted on the sediment sequences from a large lake (Lake Storsjön) and a fjord-like inlet of Baltic Sea (Gåsfjärden) on the east coast of Sweden. The two sites are within the same catchment and connected by a river system. The results show that the composition of lignin-derived organic matter deposited in Gåsfjärden is less sensitive to the variation of vegetation cover than in Storsjön, which is likely due to the sortation and alteration on the terrestrial organic matter during the transportation from the inland to the coast. The concentration of lignin is much lower in Gåsfjärden than Storsjön as the organic matter deposition is dominated by aquatic material in Gåsfjärden. Furthermore, Gåsfjärden receives less degraded terrestrial organic matter, likely because the organic matter liable to degradation has been lost during transportation to the sea.

This study highlights the potential of the combined use of lignin phenols and pollen-based quantitative land-cover reconstructions for investigating long-term changes in terrestrial organic matter input to aquatic ecosystems. The findings of the study provide a better understanding of human impacts on organic carbon cycling from a long-term perspective, which is fundamental for the development of environmental management strategies.

Department/s

  • Quaternary Sciences
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
  • MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Publication/Series

LUNDQUA THESIS

Issue

90

Document type

Dissertation

Publisher

Lund University

Topic

  • Geology

Keywords

  • lignin phenols, pollen, Land Reconstruction Algorithm, terrestrial organic matter
  • southern Sweden
  • sediments

Status

Published

Project

  • Implications of land use on the carbon cycle - Impacts of long-term human activities on terrestrial organic matter input to aquatic ecosystems in southern Sweden
  • Long-term anthropogenic impact on organic matter input to the Baltic Sea
  • A centennial- to millennial-scale perspective on the Skogaryd Research Catchment based on lake sediments.
  • Late holocene human impact dynamics in southern Sweden

Supervisor

  • Anne Birgitte Nielsen
  • Karl Ljung
  • Dan Hammarlund

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0281-3033
  • ISBN: 978-91-87847-55-4
  • ISBN: 978-91-87847-54-7

Defence date

27 November 2020

Defence time

13:15

Defence place

Pangea, Geologiska institutionen, Sölvegatan 12. Join via zoom: https://lu-se.zoom.us/j/61121110711

Opponent

  • Joyanto Routh (Biträdande professor)