TY - JOUR
T1 - Changes in stable isotopes, lignin-derived phenols, and fossil pigments in sediments of Lake Biwa, Japan
T2 - Implications for anthropogenic effects over the last 100 years
AU - Hyodo, Fujio
AU - Tsugeki, Narumi
AU - Azuma, Jun ichi
AU - Urabe, Jotaro
AU - Nakanishi, Masami
AU - Wada, Eitaro
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by the Research Institute of Humanity and Nature, Japan (P3-1 and a FS study), a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research of MEXT Japan to JU, and the Research Fellowship of Japan Society for the Promotion of Science for Young Scientists to FH and NKT.
PY - 2008/9/15
Y1 - 2008/9/15
N2 - We measured stable nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) isotope ratios, lignin-derived phenols, and fossil pigments in sediments of known ages to elucidate the historical changes in the ecosystem status of Lake Biwa, Japan, over the last 100 years. Stable N isotope ratios and algal pigments in the sediments increased rapidly from the early 1960s to the 1980s, and then remained relatively constant, indicating that eutrophication occurred in the early 1960s but ceased in the 1980s. Stable C isotope ratios of the sediment increased from the 1960s, but decreased after the 1980s to the present. This decrease in stable C isotope ratios after the 1980s could not be explained by annual changes in either terrestrial input or algal production. However, when the C isotope ratios were corrected for the Suess effect, the shift to more negative isotopic value in atmospheric CO2 by fossil fuel burning, the isotopic value showed a trend, which is consistent with the other biomarkers and the monitoring data. The trend was also mirrored by the relative abundance of lignin-derived phenols, a unique organic tracer of material that originated from terrestrial plants, which decreased in the early 1960s and recovered to some degree in the 1980s. We detected no notable difference in the composition of lignin phenols, suggesting that the terrestrial plant composition did not change markedly. However, we found that lignin accumulation rate increased around the 1980s. These results suggest that although eutrophication has stabilized since the 1980s, allochthonous organic matter input has changed in Lake Biwa over the past 25 years.
AB - We measured stable nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) isotope ratios, lignin-derived phenols, and fossil pigments in sediments of known ages to elucidate the historical changes in the ecosystem status of Lake Biwa, Japan, over the last 100 years. Stable N isotope ratios and algal pigments in the sediments increased rapidly from the early 1960s to the 1980s, and then remained relatively constant, indicating that eutrophication occurred in the early 1960s but ceased in the 1980s. Stable C isotope ratios of the sediment increased from the 1960s, but decreased after the 1980s to the present. This decrease in stable C isotope ratios after the 1980s could not be explained by annual changes in either terrestrial input or algal production. However, when the C isotope ratios were corrected for the Suess effect, the shift to more negative isotopic value in atmospheric CO2 by fossil fuel burning, the isotopic value showed a trend, which is consistent with the other biomarkers and the monitoring data. The trend was also mirrored by the relative abundance of lignin-derived phenols, a unique organic tracer of material that originated from terrestrial plants, which decreased in the early 1960s and recovered to some degree in the 1980s. We detected no notable difference in the composition of lignin phenols, suggesting that the terrestrial plant composition did not change markedly. However, we found that lignin accumulation rate increased around the 1980s. These results suggest that although eutrophication has stabilized since the 1980s, allochthonous organic matter input has changed in Lake Biwa over the past 25 years.
KW - Eutrophication
KW - Fossil pigments
KW - Lake Biwa
KW - Land transformation
KW - Lignin-derived phenol
KW - Stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes
KW - Suess effect
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U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2008.05.010
DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2008.05.010
M3 - Article
C2 - 18585757
AN - SCOPUS:47849124591
SN - 0048-9697
VL - 403
SP - 139
EP - 147
JO - Science of the Total Environment
JF - Science of the Total Environment
IS - 1-3
ER -