Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges

Lake sediments contain the remains of midge communities that may be used as biological proxies for inferring past environmental changes. Freshwater midges, including Chironomidae and Chaoboridae, from two alpine tarns (Pyramid Lake and Bullwinkle Lake) in the Cassiar Mountains of northern British Co...

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Main Author: Fleming, Erin Mattea
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2811
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-28112014-03-26T03:35:24Z Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges Fleming, Erin Mattea Chironomidae Chaoboridae Pyramid Lake Bullwinkle Lake Cassiar Mountains British Columbia Midge Palaeoecology Holocene Palaeotemperature Palaeoclimate Milankovitch thermal maximum Lake sediments contain the remains of midge communities that may be used as biological proxies for inferring past environmental changes. Freshwater midges, including Chironomidae and Chaoboridae, from two alpine tarns (Pyramid Lake and Bullwinkle Lake) in the Cassiar Mountains of northern British Columbia were used to estimate Holocene palaeotemperature changes, and more specifically, to test for the presence of the Milankovitch thermal maximum, an early Holocene warm interval coinciding with peak Holocene summer solar insolation. Mean July air temperatures were reconstructed using midge-inference models developed via weighted averaging-partial least squares (WA-PLS) regression. Cold-tolerant midge taxa dominate the stratigraphies from both Pyramid and Bullwinkle Lakes; however, warm-adapted species are more common in Bullwinkle Lake. Early Holocene warming is apparent at both lakes, however it is unclear whether this is indicative of the Milankovitch thermal maximum. A decrease in temperature occurs from 8,700-7,900 cal. yr BP at Pyramid Lake, around the same time that the 8,200 cal. yr BP cooling event occurred in the northern hemisphere. During the middle Holocene, records from Pyramid Lake indicate an overall decrease in temperature, with a short period of warmer temperatures that peak at 5,100 cal. yr BP. Temperatures fluctuate little during this time at Bullwinkle Lake. A short warming phase is apparent at both lakes during the late Holocene. July temperatures are highest at 2,000 cal. yr BP (10.5°C) in Pyramid Lake and at 1,200 cal. yr BP (13°C) in Bullwinkle Lake. Thereafter, temperatures return to what they were before the warming occurred, and at Bullwinkle Lake, vary little throughout the remainder of the Holocene. 2008-11-25T16:31:05Z 2008-11-25T16:31:05Z 2008 2008-11-25T16:31:05Z 2008-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2811 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Chironomidae
Chaoboridae
Pyramid Lake
Bullwinkle Lake
Cassiar Mountains British Columbia
Midge
Palaeoecology
Holocene
Palaeotemperature
Palaeoclimate
Milankovitch thermal maximum
spellingShingle Chironomidae
Chaoboridae
Pyramid Lake
Bullwinkle Lake
Cassiar Mountains British Columbia
Midge
Palaeoecology
Holocene
Palaeotemperature
Palaeoclimate
Milankovitch thermal maximum
Fleming, Erin Mattea
Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges
description Lake sediments contain the remains of midge communities that may be used as biological proxies for inferring past environmental changes. Freshwater midges, including Chironomidae and Chaoboridae, from two alpine tarns (Pyramid Lake and Bullwinkle Lake) in the Cassiar Mountains of northern British Columbia were used to estimate Holocene palaeotemperature changes, and more specifically, to test for the presence of the Milankovitch thermal maximum, an early Holocene warm interval coinciding with peak Holocene summer solar insolation. Mean July air temperatures were reconstructed using midge-inference models developed via weighted averaging-partial least squares (WA-PLS) regression. Cold-tolerant midge taxa dominate the stratigraphies from both Pyramid and Bullwinkle Lakes; however, warm-adapted species are more common in Bullwinkle Lake. Early Holocene warming is apparent at both lakes, however it is unclear whether this is indicative of the Milankovitch thermal maximum. A decrease in temperature occurs from 8,700-7,900 cal. yr BP at Pyramid Lake, around the same time that the 8,200 cal. yr BP cooling event occurred in the northern hemisphere. During the middle Holocene, records from Pyramid Lake indicate an overall decrease in temperature, with a short period of warmer temperatures that peak at 5,100 cal. yr BP. Temperatures fluctuate little during this time at Bullwinkle Lake. A short warming phase is apparent at both lakes during the late Holocene. July temperatures are highest at 2,000 cal. yr BP (10.5°C) in Pyramid Lake and at 1,200 cal. yr BP (13°C) in Bullwinkle Lake. Thereafter, temperatures return to what they were before the warming occurred, and at Bullwinkle Lake, vary little throughout the remainder of the Holocene.
author Fleming, Erin Mattea
author_facet Fleming, Erin Mattea
author_sort Fleming, Erin Mattea
title Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges
title_short Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges
title_full Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges
title_fullStr Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges
title_full_unstemmed Reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern British Columbia using fossil midges
title_sort reconstruction of holocene environmental changes in northern british columbia using fossil midges
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2811
work_keys_str_mv AT flemingerinmattea reconstructionofholoceneenvironmentalchangesinnorthernbritishcolumbiausingfossilmidges
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