Abstract
ABSTRACT Northern lakes provide many ecosystem services, including the provision of traditional foods and clean water. These systems are vulnerable to climate-driven changes in hydrology and contaminant accumulation, but the direction and magnitude of projected changes are poorly constrained. One contaminant of concern is mercury; currently, we cannot accurately predict how mercury accumulation in lakes will respond to climate-induced changes, especially in lakes with glacial inflows and complex hydrology. Sediment cores collected from two regions of a glacially fed lake (Lhù’ààn Mân’; Kluane Lake, Yukon, Canada) were analyzed to investigate controls on sediment mercury accumulation in the context of previously described hydrological changes. Differences in catchment contributions drove differences in sediment mercury accumulation between lake regions during the Duke River hydrological period (ca. 750–1650). During the more recent Slims River hydrological period (ca. 1650–2015), mercury accumulation did not differ between regions, and mercury was delivered to the lake primarily via catchment organic matter and carbonate-rich sediments from the largest, glacially derived inflow (Slims River). Recent climate-induced geomorphic change caused loss of the main lake inflow (Slims River) in 2016, making Kluane Lake an ideal system for future investigations of how loss of glacial inflow will affect mercury accumulation in northern lakes.
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