Similarity between contemporary vegetation and plant remains in the surface sediment in Mediterranean lakes

Summary Aquatic macrophytes are commonly used to assess the ecological condition of lakes. Little is known, however, about long‐term macrophyte dynamics in shallow lakes. In the absence of historical data, the remains of macrophytes (fruits, seeds and vegetative fragments) found in lake sediments ma...

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Published inFreshwater biology Vol. 59; no. 4; pp. 724 - 736
Main Authors Levİ, Etİ E., Çakıroğlu, Ayşe İ., Bucak, Tuba, Odgaard, Bent V., Davidson, Thomas A., Jeppesen, Erik, Beklİoğlu, Meryem
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.04.2014
Blackwell
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Summary Aquatic macrophytes are commonly used to assess the ecological condition of lakes. Little is known, however, about long‐term macrophyte dynamics in shallow lakes. In the absence of historical data, the remains of macrophytes (fruits, seeds and vegetative fragments) found in lake sediments may provide just such information. In order to interpret confidently past change in aquatic plant communities from their sedimentary remains, it is vital to establish the similarity between the contemporary and fossil assemblages. We investigated the relationship between present lake vegetation and plant macrophyte remains in surface sediments. Thirty‐five shallow lakes, spanning around six degrees of latitude and mostly located in the semi‐arid Mediterranean climatic zone of Turkey, were sampled for aquatic plants, surface sediment plant remains and a range of other key environmental variables. Around 50% of the taxa recorded in the modern vegetation were represented in the sediment. Sedimentary macrofossils of some taxa were under‐ or over‐represented relative to their frequency in the modern vegetation, for example Potamogeton spp. and Characeae, respectively. Despite this disparity, there was good agreement between the assemblage composition of the modern and sedimentary samples. Furthermore, conductivity and trophic state (as indicated by total nitrogen, total phosphorus and chlorophyll‐a) were the environmental variables most clearly correlated with both the contemporary and macrofossil assemblages in these lakes. We conclude that aquatic macrophyte macrofossils can be used as reliable indicators of ecological status and to determine qualitative changes in assemblages of aquatic plants consequent to environmental change (e.g. in lake trophic status and/or salinity). This may be especially useful for lakes in arid and semi‐arid Mediterranean regions, which are particularly vulnerable to hydrological constraints under climate change.
Bibliography:Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship - No. 255180
TUBITAK-CAYDAG - No. 105Y332; No. 110Y125
EU FP-7 project REFRESH
CIRCE - Aarhus University Ideas Centre and the ARC Centre
ark:/67375/WNG-H4L7FWNR-8
ArticleID:FWB12299
Middle East Technical University (METU)-BAP programme of Turkey - No. BAP.07.02.2009-2012
istex:83E77AADCACB5003D177A47D37FB50FD11567CE3
TUBITAK - No. 105Y332; No. 110Y125
TUBITAK 2211 Scholarship programme
FP-7 REFRESH - No. 244121
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0046-5070
1365-2427
DOI:10.1111/fwb.12299