Diatom analysis and the acidification of lakes
- 1 May 1984
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences
- Vol. 305 (1124), 451-477
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1984.0070
Abstract
Diatom microfossils preserved in lake sediments can be used to provide evidence for lake acidification. Unlike documentary methods of historical reconstruction, the sediment record is potentially useful at all sites, it is usually continuous and it can be extended backwards in time as desired. Cores can be taken with little disturbance, by freezing in situ if necessary, and sediments deposited since about 1800 a.d. can be dated using 210Pb analysis. T he strong relationship between diatom occurrence and water pH allows pH to be reconstructed with a standard error of between ca. 0.25 and 0.5 pH unit using either an index system or multiple regression analysis. Although there is evidence that long term acidification is a natural process tor lakes in areas of resistant base-poor bedrock, diatom analyses from NW European and North American sites shows that rapid acidification has taken place within the last 150 years. The first major sign of acidification is the loss of planktonic diatoms at pH values between about 5.5 and 5.8. Acidification below pH 5.5 leads to the decline of species typical of circumneutral water, such as Achnanthes microcephala Kütz. Cymbella gracilis (Rabh.) Cleve and Anomoeoneis vitrea (Grun.) Ross, and the expansion of acidophilous taxa such as Tabellaria flocculosa (Roth.) Kütz. and Eunotia veneris (Kütz.) O. Müller. Acidobiontic species become common at pH values less than 5.5 and as the pH drops to 4.5 these taxa begin to replace acidophilous taxa in the assemblage. Tabellaria binalis (Ehr.) Grun. is probably the most faithful member of this group. Diatom analysis for four acid lakes in Galloway, SW Scotland show that the beginning of acidification has varied from 1840 (Loch Enoch) to 1925 (Loch Grannoch) and that pH has declined by between ca. 0.5 units (Loch Dee) and ca. 1.2 pH units (Loch Grannoch) in these lakes. Since lakes without afforested catchments have been acidified and lakes with afforested catchments were acidified before afforestation it can be concluded that afforestation is not responsible for acidification in this region.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- The use of electronically counted microspheres in absolute diatom analysisLimnology and Oceanography, 1982
- Acidification and other chemical changes Halifax County lakes after 21 yearsLimnology and Oceanography, 1979
- The calculation of lead-210 dates assuming a constant rate of supply of unsupported 210Pb to the sedimentCATENA, 1978
- Man‐made Changes in Some Dutch Moorland Pools, as Reflected by Historical and Recent Data about Diatoms and MacrophytesInternational Review of Hydrobiology, 1978
- THE LATE QUATERNARY HISTORY OF THE DIATOM FLORA OF LLYN CLYD AND LLYN GLAS, TWO SMALL OLIGOTROPHIC HIGH MOUNTAIN TARNS IN SNOWDONIA (WALES)New Phytologist, 1977
- A standard profile for Littorina transgressions in western Skåne, South SwedenBoreas, 1975
- Acidification of the La Cloche Mountain Lakes, Ontario, and Resulting Fish MortalitiesJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1972
- POLLEN AND DIATOM ANALYSES OF LATE‐QUATERNARY DEPOSITS IN THE BLELHAM BASIN, NORTH LANCASHIRENew Phytologist, 1970
- Chemical investigation of lake sediments and their interpretationProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1965
- The development of vegetation in the English lakes, considered in relation to the general evolution of glacial lakes and rock basinsProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1921