Environmental impacts of Little Ice Age cooling in central Mexico recorded in the sediments of a tropical alpine lake

被引:0
作者
E. Cuna
E. Zawisza
M. Caballero
A. C. Ruiz-Fernández
S. Lozano-García
J. Alcocer
机构
[1] Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,Instituto de Geofísica
[2] Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,Mazatlán Academic Unit, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología
[3] Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,Instituto de Geología
[4] Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,Proyecto de Investigación en Limnología Tropical, FES Iztacala
[5] Polish Academy of Sciences,Research Centre in Warsaw, Institute of Geological Sciences
来源
Journal of Paleolimnology | 2014年 / 51卷
关键词
LIA; Central Mexico; Tropical alpine lake; Diatoms; Cladocerans;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Little Ice Age (LIA), AD 1350–1850, represents one of the most recent, persistent global climate oscillations. In Mexico, it has been associated with temperature decreases of 1.5–2 °C and mountain glacier advances, which are not accurately dated. We present new information about the nature of the LIA in central Mexico based on a decadal-resolution sediment sequence from high-altitude, tropical Lake La Luna, in the Nevado de Toluca volcano. We inferred past climatic and environmental changes using magnetic susceptibility, charcoal particles, palynomorphs, diatoms, cladoceran remains and multivariate statistics. The onset of the LIA corresponds with the beginning of a long-term trend to colder and drier climate ca. AD 1360–1910. The coolest and driest episode, ~AD 1660–1760, which corresponds with the Maunder Minimum in solar activity, was characterized by a cladoceran assemblage that showed the greatest dissimilarity to the modern one (no modern analogue), with the presence of cold-water species and Daphnia ephippia. The beginning of a warming trend ca. AD 1760, was identified by a diatom assemblage dominated by species with affinities for higher pH values (>6) and the greatest dissimilarity to the modern assemblage. This less cold, but still dry period, corresponds with historical reports of cattle and crop losses that predated the Mexican wars of Independence (AD 1810–1821) and Revolution (1910–1924). Modern conditions, established around AD 1910, resemble those during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (ca. AD 1200). No clear evidence of modern, human-induced environmental change was recorded, indicating that Lake La Luna is an ideal site in Mexico to monitor future impacts of global change.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 14
页数:13
相关论文
共 231 条
[1]  
Alcocer J(2004)Phytoplankton biomass and water chemistry in two high mountains, tropical lakes in central Mexico Arct Antarct Alp Res 36 342-346
[2]  
Oseguera LA(2000)Paleolimnological approaches to climate change, with special regard to the biological record Quatern Sci Rev 19 107-124
[3]  
Escobar E(2011)A reference typology of low alkalinity lakes in the UK based on pre-acidification diatom assemblages from lake sediment cores J Paleolimnol 45 489-505
[4]  
Peralta L(2004)Reinvestigation of the classic late-glacial Bølling Sø sequence, Denmark: chronology, macrofossils, cladocera and chydorid ephippia J Quatern Sci 19 465-478
[5]  
Lugo A(2001)Persistent solar influence on North Atlantic climate during the Holocene Science 294 2130-2136
[6]  
Battarbee RW(1996)The diatom flora of two acid lakes in central Mexico Diatom Res 11 227-240
[7]  
Battarbee RW(2002)Seasonal ecosystem variability in remote mountain lakes: implications for detecting climatic signals in sediment records J Paleolimnol 28 25-46
[8]  
Simpson HB(2000)Description of Iliocryptus nevadensis (Branchiopoda, Anomopoda), a new species from high altitude rater lake in the volcano Nevado de toluca, Mexico Crustaceana 354 311-321
[9]  
Curtis C(1988)Particle motion and the theory of charcoal analysis: source area, transport, deposition, and sampling Quat Res 30 67-80
[10]  
Bennike O(2005)Las sequías en México durante el siglo XIX Investig Geog 56 118-133