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Holocene hydroclimate and landscape changes as drivers of organic carbon cycling in a small northern Fennoscandian lake

Orozco, Lilia E.; Weckström, Jan; Plociennik, Mateusz; Åberg, Annika K.; Sakari Salonen, J.; Gröcke, Darren R.; Arppe, Laura; Heikkilä, Maija

Holocene hydroclimate and landscape changes as drivers of organic carbon cycling in a small northern Fennoscandian lake Thumbnail


Authors

Lilia E. Orozco

Jan Weckström

Mateusz Plociennik

Annika K. Åberg

J. Sakari Salonen

Laura Arppe

Maija Heikkilä



Abstract

Lakes and ponds play a critical role in the high-latitude carbon cycle. Rapid climate warming, cryosphere degradation and increasing rainfall are transforming catchments and land-water interactions, altering lake carbon cycling in unprecedented ways. Here, we present Holocene (past 10.5 ka) sediment records from a small northern Fennoscandian lake to elucidate linkages of past hydroclimate change and lake carbon cycling. Using elemental and stable isotope composition of organic matter (C%, N%, δ13C, δ15N), age control from 23 radiocarbon dates, and a ground-penetrating radar survey of lake sediment layers, we reconstructed organic matter burial and sources, aided with a Bayesian end-member mixing model based on measurements from modern terrestrial and aquatic vegetation and particulate organic matter. The hydroclimate and lake hydrological regime changes were interpreted from lake-water ẟ18O (ẟ18Olw) reconstructed from subfossil chironomid (Chironomidae; non-biting midges) head capsules and ẟ18O and ẟ2H monitoring of local meteoric, lake and groundwaters. The ẟ18Olw and carbon burial mirror the Holocene temperature pattern, increasing in the cooler early Holocene, at their maxima in the warm mid-Holocene, and decreasing during the late Holocene cooling. The lake was dominated by aquatic organic matter through the Holocene, with benthic sources more dominant in the early Holocene and planktic in the late Holocene. A slight increase in the terrestrial organic matter proportion occurred in the warm and dry mid-Holocene despite reduced hydrological connectivity, which is contrary to the hypothesis that wetter climate increases allochtonous C burial. The higher mid-Holocene ẟ18Olw values were superimposed by lower values at ca. 6.5 cal ka BP, interpreted as increased winter precipitation contributing to snowmelt and isotopically light groundwater impacting ẟ18Olw. This interval is coupled with highly siliceous sediment deposition indicating marked aquatic productivity, possibly linked with inputs of groundwater rich in silica and phosphorous. Our findings underscore the importance of hydrological connectivity on both burial and sourcing of C in high-latitude lakes, and suggest that in future wetter climate, high-latitude lakes may play more important role as processors than sinks of carbon.

Citation

Orozco, L. E., Weckström, J., Plociennik, M., Åberg, A. K., Sakari Salonen, J., Gröcke, D. R., Arppe, L., & Heikkilä, M. (2025). Holocene hydroclimate and landscape changes as drivers of organic carbon cycling in a small northern Fennoscandian lake. Quaternary Science Reviews, 357, Article 109323. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109323

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 20, 2025
Online Publication Date Mar 26, 2025
Publication Date Jun 1, 2025
Deposit Date Apr 24, 2025
Publicly Available Date Apr 24, 2025
Journal Quaternary Science Reviews
Print ISSN 0277-3791
Electronic ISSN 1873-457X
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 357
Article Number 109323
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109323
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3780814

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