Jack Lacey
Understanding the drivers of ecosystem change at Tasik Chini to inform sustainable management
Lacey, Jack; Leng, Melanie; Mcgowan, Suzanne; Panizzo, Virginia; Pereira, Ryan; Boyle, John; Engels, Stefan; Idris, Mushrifah; Mills, Keely; Ryves, David; Shafiq, Muhammad; Vane, Christopher
Authors
Melanie Leng
Suzanne Mcgowan
VIRGINIA PANIZZO Virginia.Panizzo@nottingham.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Ryan Pereira
John Boyle
Stefan Engels
Mushrifah Idris
Keely Mills
David Ryves
Muhammad Shafiq
Christopher Vane
Abstract
Tropical areas are subject to increasing environmental pressures as a combined result of climate change and human impact on the landscape, which threaten significantly the quality and biodiversity of freshwater ecosystems. Recent economic development in Malaysia has resulted in widespread forest clearance for logging and oil palm plantations, increased mining activity, and pollution from industrial and urban growth. These have impacted directly on Tasik Chini and its surrounding area in recent decades, and conservation of this rare wetland is of great importance due to its ecological and cultural significance. The implementation of sustainable management strategies can help protect the site into the future, however a large proportion of limnological studies and monitoring surveys these plans will be based on were conducted after the start of rapid development in the late 20 th century. Therefore, determining how the ecosystem functioned before the influence of major human activity and what effect environmental changes had on Tasik Chini is important for understanding the natural baseline conditions of the lake-catchment system and for generating robust approaches to conservation. Here, we use palaeolimnological techniques to investigate multiple sediment cores from Tasik Chini to study environmental conditions since the lake's formation around 5000 years ago, which will help to identify the key drivers of ecosystem change and provide a longer-term context for the influence of human activity at the site. A combination of elemental, stable isotope, diatom, and pigment analyses indicate substantial shifts in sedimentation, hydrology, and water quality, in particular since the mid-20 th century. The palaeorecord confirms recent environmental variability to exceed that of natural changes in the past, where major shifts in the lake ecosystem were principally initiated by land use changes and hydrological impoundment.
Citation
Lacey, J., Leng, M., Mcgowan, S., Panizzo, V., Pereira, R., Boyle, J., …Vane, C. (2021). Understanding the drivers of ecosystem change at Tasik Chini to inform sustainable management. In International eConference of Science and Biosphere Reserve (IECSBR) 2021: Program book
Conference Name | International eConference of Science and Biosphere Reserve (IECSBR) 2021 |
---|---|
Conference Location | Virtual Conference |
Start Date | Mar 3, 2021 |
End Date | Mar 4, 2021 |
Acceptance Date | Jan 26, 2021 |
Online Publication Date | Mar 3, 2021 |
Publication Date | Mar 3, 2021 |
Deposit Date | Mar 9, 2021 |
Publicly Available Date | Mar 9, 2021 |
Series Title | International eConference of Science and Biosphere Reserve |
Book Title | International eConference of Science and Biosphere Reserve (IECSBR) 2021: Program book |
Public URL | https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/5383037 |
Publisher URL | https://iecsbr.lodopagevconference.com/ |
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