2009
DOI: 10.4319/lo.2009.54.6_part_2.2330
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Paleolimnological evidence of the effects on lakes of energy and mass transfer from climate and humans

Abstract: The premise of this article is that climate effects on lakes can be quantified most effectively by the integration of process-oriented limnological studies with paleolimnological research, particularly when both disciplines operate within a common conceptual framework. To this end, the energy (E)-mass (m) flux framework (Em flux) is developed and applied to selected retrospective studies to demonstrate that climate variability regulates lake structure and function over diverse temporal and spatial scales throu… Show more

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Cited by 169 publications
(183 citation statements)
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References 115 publications
(149 reference statements)
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“…In contrast, external inputs of IC appear to regulate the C content of hard-water lakes at all timescales (Table 2) (Stets et al 2009), while mainly chemical mechanisms (pH, precipitation) provide the weak linkage between IC and OC fluxes Finlay et al 2009). Although this weakly coupled dual flux model is tentative and requires validation, we note that it is consistent with predictions of the Em flux framework of Leavitt et al (2009) in which the relative effects of energy (E) or mass (m) influx on ecosystem function are greatest when influx composes a high proportion of lake content.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 66%
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“…In contrast, external inputs of IC appear to regulate the C content of hard-water lakes at all timescales (Table 2) (Stets et al 2009), while mainly chemical mechanisms (pH, precipitation) provide the weak linkage between IC and OC fluxes Finlay et al 2009). Although this weakly coupled dual flux model is tentative and requires validation, we note that it is consistent with predictions of the Em flux framework of Leavitt et al (2009) in which the relative effects of energy (E) or mass (m) influx on ecosystem function are greatest when influx composes a high proportion of lake content.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 66%
“…R. Leavitt unpubl. data) and longer cores spanning up to 250 yr (Hall et al 1999;Leavitt et al 2006) reveal that C deposition varies , 25% among profundal sites, a range that is similar to observed spatial variation within other lakes . Together, these findings suggest that comparisons of C efflux within and among lakes are robust to measurement errors, particularly when averaged over the 13 yr of study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
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“…Climate variability was measured as changes in air temperature and precipitation (Leavitt et al 2009). Annual and seasonal air temperature were extracted from the historical instrumental climatological surface time series of the Alpine region database (www.zamg.ac.at/histalp/), according to lake geographical coordinates (Auer et al 2007).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, far more interesting questions may be addressed where independent data on forcing variables are available covering the same time period as the observed samples (Leavitt et al 2009). For example, given independent temperature measurements for a recent sediment core sequence covering the past 1-200 yr, one could model the effect of temperature variations on species composition recorded in the sediment samples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%