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Title: | First human impacts and responses of aquatic systems: A review of palaeolimnological records from around the world |
Authors: | Dubois, Nathalie Saulnier-Talbot, Émilie Mills, Keely Gell, Peter Battarbee, Rick Bennion, Helen Sakonvan Chawchai Dong, Xuhui Francus, Pierre Flower, Roger Gomes, Doriedson F Gregory-Eave, Irene Humane, Sumedh Kattel, Giri Jenny, JeanPhilippe Langdon, Peter Massaferro, Julieta McGowan, Suzanne Mikomägi, Annika Nguyen Thi Minh Ngoc Ratnayake, Amila Sandaruwan Reid, Michael Rose, Neil Saros, Jasmine Schillereff, Daniel Tolotti, Monica Valero-Garcés, Blas |
Email: | No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided sakonvan.c@chula.ac.th No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided No information provided |
Other author: | Chulalongkorn University. Faculty of Science |
Issue Date: | Apr-2018 |
Publisher: | SAGE Publications Inc. |
Citation: | Anthropocene Review. Vol.5, Issue 1 (April, 2018), p.28-68 |
Abstract: | Lake sediments constitute natural archives of past environmental changes. Historically, research has focused mainly on generating regional climate records, but records of human impacts caused by land use and exploitation of freshwater resources are now attracting scientific and management interests. Long-term environmental records are useful to establish ecosystem reference conditions, enabling comparisons with current environments and potentially allowing future trajectories to be more tightly constrained. Here we review the timing and onset of human disturbance in and around inland water ecosystems as revealed through sedimentary archives from around the world. Palaeolimnology provides access to a wealth of information reflecting early human activities and their corresponding aquatic ecological shifts. First human impacts on aquatic systems and their watersheds are highly variable in time and space. Landscape disturbance often constitutes the first anthropogenic signal in palaeolimnological records. While the effects of humans at the landscape level are relatively easily demonstrated, the earliest signals of human-induced changes in the structure and functioning of aquatic ecosystems need very careful investigation using multiple proxies. Additional studies will improve our understanding of linkages between human settlements, their exploitation of land and water resources, and the downstream effects on continental waters. |
URI: | http://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/61722 |
URI: | https://doi.org/10.1177%2F2053019617740365 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2053019617740365 |
ISSN: | 2053-0196 (Print) 2053-020X (Online) |
metadata.dc.identifier.DOI: | 10.1177/2053019617740365 |
Type: | Article |
Appears in Collections: | Foreign Journal Article |
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