Abstract

Abstract. During the latter stages of the Holocene, and prior to anthropogenic global warming, the Earth underwent a period of cooling called the neoglacial. The neoglacial is associated with declining summer insolation and changes to Earth's surface albedo. Although impacts varied globally, in China the neoglacial was generally associated with a cooler climate and an attenuated Asian summer monsoon. Few studies in central China, however, have explored the impact of neoglacial cooling on freshwater diversity, especially in alpine regions. Here we take a palaeolimnological approach to characterise multi-decadal variability in diatom community composition, ecological guilds, and compositional turnover over the past 3500 years from the alpine Yuhuang Chi lake on Mount Taibai in the Qinling mountains. Diatoms in the high-profile guild dominate much of the record from 3500 to 615 cal BP, which suggests that few nutrients in the lake were limiting overall, and disturbance and herbivory were likely low. After 615 cal BP, low-profile and planktic guild diatoms increase, suggesting greater turbulence in the lake, alongside a decline in available nutrients. Diatom turnover highlights periods in the lake history when deterministic processes structured diatom communities. For example, an abrupt decline in turnover is coincident with the shift from high- to low-profile diatoms at 615 cal BP, and this is likely due to the onset of the Little Ice Age in the region. We suggest that Yuhuang Chi lake became more shallow during peak regional aridity, which led to the short-lived community restructuring observed in the record.

Highlights

  • Alpine ecosystems are some of the most sensitive to changing climate, due in part to elevation-dependent warming, i.e. the amplification of warming at higher altitudes (Yan and Liu, 2014; Pepin et al, 2015)

  • A total of 170 species of diatom were identified from Yuhuang Chi lake, with the majority (120 species) being only of low occurrence (< 1 % in one or more samples)

  • For much of the stratigraphy, diatoms were dominated by fragilarioids and naviculoids up to ca. 930 cal BP, (1020 CE) after which they decline to be replaced by Monoraphidand Gomphonema-type taxa alongside the centric Lindavia

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Summary

Introduction

Alpine ecosystems are some of the most sensitive to changing climate, due in part to elevation-dependent warming, i.e. the amplification of warming at higher altitudes (Yan and Liu, 2014; Pepin et al, 2015). Alpine freshwaters have multiple ecosystem functions (Messerli et al, 2004; Buytaert et al, 2017) and provide many ecosystem services such as freshwater regulation and habitat provision (GrêtRegamey et al, 2012). Their multifunctionality depends on local species communities and how species vary through space and time (beta diversity) and are driven by ecosystem properties, environmental gradients, and species interactions (Korhonen et al, 2010).

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