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Diatoms in a sediment core from a flood pulse wetland in Malaysia record strong responses to human impacts and hydro‐climate over the past 150 years

Briddon, Charlotte L.; McGowan, Suzanne; Metcalfe, Sarah E.; Panizzo, Virginia; Lacey, Jack; Engels, Stefan; Leng, Melanie; Mills, Keely; Shafiq, Muhammad; Idris, Mushrifah

Diatoms in a sediment core from a flood pulse wetland in Malaysia record strong responses to human impacts and hydro‐climate over the past 150 years Thumbnail


Authors

Charlotte L. Briddon

Suzanne McGowan

Jack Lacey

Stefan Engels

Keely Mills

Muhammad Shafiq

Mushrifah Idris



Abstract

Rapid development and climate change in southeast Asia is placing unprecedented pressures on freshwater ecosystems, but long term records of the ecological consequences are rare. Here we examine one basin of Tasik Chini (Malaysia), a UNESCO?designated flood pulse wetland, where human disturbances (dam installation, iron ore mining, oil palm and rubber cultivation) have escalated since the 1980s. Diatom analysis and organic matter geochemistry (?13Corg and C/N ratios) were applied to a sediment sequence to infer ecological changes in the basin since c. 1900 CE. As the Tasik Chini wetland is a rare ecosystem with an unknown diatom ecology, contemporary diatom habitats (plant surfaces, mud surfaces, rocks, plankton) were sampled from across the lake to help interpret the sedimentary record. Habitat specificity of diatoms was not strongly defined and, although planktonic and benthic groupings were distinctive, there was no difference in assemblages among the benthic habitat surfaces. An increase in the proportion of benthic diatom taxa suggests that a substantial decrease in water level occurred between c. 1938 and 1995 CE, initiated by a decline in rainfall (supported by regional meteorological data), which increased the hydrological isolation of the sub?basin. Changes in the diatom assemblages were most marked after 1995 CE when the Chini dam was installed. After this time both ?13Corg and C/N decreased, suggesting an increase in autochthonous production relative to allochthonous river flood pulse inputs. Oil palm plantations and mining continued to expand after c. 1995 CE and we speculate that inputs of pollutants from these activities may have contributed to the marked ecological change. Together, our work shows that this sub?basin of Tasik Chini has been particularly sensitive to, and impacted by, a combination of human and climatically induced changes due to its hydrologically isolated position.

Citation

Briddon, C. L., McGowan, S., Metcalfe, S. E., Panizzo, V., Lacey, J., Engels, S., …Idris, M. (2020). Diatoms in a sediment core from a flood pulse wetland in Malaysia record strong responses to human impacts and hydro‐climate over the past 150 years. Geo: Geography and Environment, 7(1), Article e00090. https://doi.org/10.1002/geo2.90

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 6, 2020
Online Publication Date May 13, 2020
Publication Date May 13, 2020
Deposit Date May 14, 2020
Publicly Available Date May 14, 2020
Journal Geo: Geography and Environment
Electronic ISSN 2054-4049
Publisher Wiley Open Access
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 7
Issue 1
Article Number e00090
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/geo2.90
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4435914
Publisher URL https://rgs-ibg.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/geo2.90

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