Abstract

Within the framework of a palaeolimnological pilot study, the potential of sedimentary diatom assemblages for the reconstruction of the eutrophication history was studied in short sediment cores from five shallow lakes located in the Romanian Danube Delta. A total of 234 diatom taxa representing 57 genera could be identified but diatom assemblages are generally predominated by a few species only. Loss on ignition percentages, total diatom abundances and diatom downcore successions largely vary within the single sediment cores and between all five lakes. This suggests the presence of various lake environments within the Danube Delta, each characterized by lake-specific geomorphological, sedimentological, hydrological, and biological conditions. Highly variable depositional conditions are also confirmed by radiocesium measurements in two of the five cores suggesting distinct inter-lake differences in the sedimentation rate. Causes for the great intra-lake and inter-lake variability in diatom downcore successions are difficult to specify and may include changes in the physico-chemical conditions, aquatic vegetation cover, water depth, river influence, turbidity and inter-biotic interactions. However, based on this pilot study, it is likely that the spatial and temporal distribution of sedimentary diatom assemblages in Danube Delta lakes were not triggered by the trophic state. The delta lakes likely became meso- to eutrophic long before 1950, possibly during late-Holocene times.

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