Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts

Friday, January 20, 2017

Diatom of the Month: January 2017 – Amphora coffeaeformis

January 20, 2017 0
By Keely Mills*


I am a fan of hot temperatures and sunny climates. This may sound strange coming from someone who lives in a wet and grey part of the UK (Nottingham). However, hot weather is one of the main reasons I love researching tropical lakes, and a trait I share with the January 2017 ‘Diatom of the Month’. I would like to introduce you to my favourite diatom: Amphora coffeaeformis (Fig. 1) [now renamed Halamphora coffeaeformis] – a salt-tolerant species, indicating a shallow, slightly saline environment (Gasse, 1986).


Fig. 1. A specimen of Amphora coffeaeformis found in the sediments of Lake Nyamogusingiri, Uganda (photo: K. Mills).

So, how did I come to ‘discover’ this diatom, and how did it come to be my favourite? My story starts as a new Ph.D. student at Loughborough University in 2005. I was working with Dr David Ryves on a project focussed on the Ugandan Crater Lakes, where I would use a palaeolimnological approach to infer past climate and environmental changes that took place over the last 1,000 years or so (Mills, 2009; Mills & Ryves, 2012). Back in 2005 there was much debate surrounding the spatial extent of wet and dry periods in East Africa, and one of my aims was to feed in to this debate, assessing whether past changes in rainfall in Uganda were similar (or different) to existing records from large and small lakes in Kenya, Ethiopia, and Malawi. Understanding the regional complexity of long-term changes in rainfall is crucial for modelling the Earth’s climate system, and I hoped my research would go some way to help.

Now, the region of western Uganda is as unique as it is beautiful as it is home to more than 80 crater lakes, associated with the tectonic activity related to the western arm of the East African Rift Valley System (Fig. 2).


Fig. 2. The four crater lake clusters (FP=Fort Portal, Ka=Kasenda, KK=Katwe-Kikorongo, Bu=Bunyaruguru) of western Uganda (as described by Melack, 1978), and images of some of the crater lakes (clockwise from upper left): Kako, Kamunzuka, Kifuruka, and Nyungu.

As part of my doctoral research, I obtained a sediment core from Lake Nyamogusingiri (12.5 m deep, conductivity of 554 μS cm-1). I analysed the diatom stratigraphy of this systems to allow me to infer changes in lake level that might result from rainfall variations during key time periods, such as the Little Ice Age (LIA) and the Mediaeval Climate Anomaly (MCA). In many lake sediment records from East Africa, the impact of the LIA is quite chaotic, resulting in dry periods interspersed with extremely wet periods (see CO2 Science for an overview). However, the MCA was quite a dry period in this region. I hoped to identify these ‘wet’ and ‘dry’ periods using known ecological preferences of the different diatom species, and a quantitative modelling approach.

After counting seemingly hundreds of samples from Lake Nyamogusingiri, I was beginning to get a little disheartened. My sediment samples were extremely diatom rich, but appeared to be full of Aulacoseira species (including the ‘Diatom of the Month – September 2016’)! Whilst their relative abundances fluctuated, their presence (along with other species, such as Nitzschia lancettula) suggested that there was deep(ish) freshwater in this lake all the way back to c. AD 1250…Devastated was not the word. Was I ever destined to find some indication of regional drying in these lake systems? I pressed on, knowing I had to finish counting the entire core.

But then Eureka!  At 110 cm down. Around AD 1225. I spied my very first Amphora coffeaeformis (Table 1). I knew I had it in the bag - my lakes were sensitive to the MCA (Fig. 3; Mills et al., 2014). I have honestly never felt so much joy, nor so much love for microscopic photosynthetic algae! That is how Amphora coffeaeformis became my favourite diatom, holding great memories for my research. I still get excited when I periodically cross this species in diatom preps.

Table 1: Amphora coffeaeformis – vital statistics (Gasse, 1986)
Authority
Agardh
Habitat
Water
Sodium-chloride; stagnant and running
Conductivity
1000 – >10,000 μS cm-1
pH
- <8.5
Alkalinity
- <50 meq. l-1
Temperature
10 - >35°C
Size#
Length: 15-40 μS
Width: 5-7 μS 
Striae in 10 μm: 17-21 (centre)
Notes
Well developed in hot springs, or spring-fed rivers (Afar region).
Eurythermal, high temperatures (44°C) does not inhibit development



Fig. 3. Diatom stratigraphy from Lake Nyamogusingiri showing selected taxa (> 8% in any one sample), ordered by weighted-averaging optimum (ascending). The appearance of Amphora coffeaeformisis highlighted in the red box (from Mills et al., 2014).

Palaeolimnology, particularly the use of diatoms, is an important tool in helping scientists to understand the response of lake systems and their biota to past environmental perturbations (both natural and human-induced). We can only understand the future impacts of a changing climate and increased human pressures on freshwater resources by having some idea of how these systems have responded in the past. Such data can allow us to implement long-term management strategies of freshwater, especially in regions such as East Africa that are water stressed, yet whose human populations rely heavily on the ecosystem services that freshwater lakes provide.


*Environmental Geoscientist at the British Geological Survey, Keyworth, UK.


References

Melack, J.M. (1978) Morphometric, physical and chemical features of the volcanic crater lakes of western Uganda. Archiv für Hydrobiologie 84: 430-453.

Gasse, F. (1986) East African diatoms: Taxonomy, ecological distribution. Biblioteca Diatomologica 11, Crammer, Berlin/Stuttgart, 201 pp.

Mills, K. (2009) Ugandan crater lakes: limnology, paleolimnology and palaeoenvironmental history. PhD Thesis, Loughborough University.

Mills, K., Ryves, D.B. (2012) Diatom-based models for inferring past water chemistry in western Ugandan crater lakes. Journal of Paleolimnology48: 383-399.

Mills, K., Ryves, D.B., Anderson, N.J., Bryant, C.L., Tyler, J.J. (2014) Expressions of climate perturbations in western Ugandan crater lake sediment records during the last 1000 years.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Algae Met a Bear: Algae where you'd least expect them!

January 14, 2015 0
Polar bear! In the EVERGLADES?!?!
So how many of you know the poem "Algy"?

"Algy met a bear.
The bear met Algy.
The bear was bulgy.
The bulge was Algy."


I think my dad sang "Algy" to me when I was a little tyke, though in my 3-year-old wisdom I must have taken "Algy" as "Algae" and from then on aspired to become a phycologist. Now, some attribute this verse to Ogden Nash, while others chalk it up to Anonymous (that great and varied writer!). And while this verse may be humorous, it's not truly nonsense (though this sentence is). I've seen analysis of Algy and the bear as an allegory for existentialist being (what does it mean "to be"?), while others just say (spoiler alert) that the bear ate Algy. BUT, I think they're all wrong as a result of a translational error where "Algy" should be "Algae" as my 3-year-old self clearly realized. THEREFORE:

Looks a little green 'round the edges.
"Algae met a bear.
The bear met algae."

These lines are clearly discussing the cyanobacteria that grow in polar bear hair fibers! That's right - there's a type of cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) that lives in the hollow hairs of polar bears. This isn't a natural phenomenon, as the cold habitat of polar bears prevents algae from normally colonizing polar bear fur, but in warmer zoos algae find the hair follicles of the bears a cozy place to set up shop (and turn the polar bears what some think is a sickly "green around the edges").

"The bear was bulgy.
The bulge was algae."

All pictures are a different scale: 1. Polar bear hair (tiny dots are the algae), 2. Close-up of the tiny Aphanocapsa dots, 3. Super close-up of Aphanocapsa montana, aka "the bulge". From Lewin et al. 1981.
These lines are, likewise, clearly categorizing the specific type of the cyanobacteria in those hairs. Lewin et al. in 1981 found that the algae living in polar bear hair were cyanobacteria of the order Chroococcales, resembling the species Aphanocapsa montana. Individuals of this species are unicellular and spherical, described as globules and gelatinous. I think Anonymous added "bulgy" to that description!

Glad we cleared that up.

But from here we can go completely crazy. You know that greenish tinge of sloths? Algae. (This one's really quite cool, too. Sloth hairs have cracks that allow rain to saturate the follicle, which in turn allows algae to grow hydroponically - in this case a green alga named Trichophilus welckeri is most common.

There's a really quite hilarious and informative recent study by Pauli et al. 2014 and article that summarizes a very "crappy" pathway among sloths, moths, and algae - check it out and impress your friends! Make that one sloth-obsessive think twice about that love for adorable sloths. And even a new genus and species of red has been described from sloth hair!)
Cute obligatory sea otter.

I think I also promised a picture of a sea otter. You know what? Algae in their hair, too.

And if we look beyond hair, we see all sorts of epizoic algae (algae growing on animals): on shells, turtles, lizards, manatees! Moral of the story? Wash your hair. Algae are here to take over the world.

Oh? You don't see the relevance of this to graduate research in the Everglades? Well, I could attribute this to the strain of my M.S. research finally getting to me, propelling me into babbling analysis of children rhymes and my research project (I wonder if I could squeeze this into a chapter of interdisciplinary applications of the research...). But, really, I was thinking up ways of introducing those that need no introduction: ALGAE! Pop quiz for name recognition:

Agar, biofuels, harmful algal blooms, ice cream, Naked Juice, nori, oxygen, Spirulina.

This author's personal favorite. And,
yes, it does have carrageenan.
And apparently half the fat. Tasty algae.
If any of those sound familiar, you've likely come across algae in some way or another, either as a product using some algae extract (e.g., carrageenan, a thickening agent, is used in many ice creams and is extracted from the red alga Chondrus crispus) or some other basic function (e.g., algae produce over half of the oxygen in the atmosphere!). Sylvia Lee's already written about "What is algae?" so I won't elaborate beyond "the bulge" (as above). But, instead, what's the big deal about algae in the Everglades? Well, you're going to have to stay tuned for next week's (?) episode of Nick's Wonderful World of Algae. I see you all waiting as eagerly for it as for new episodes of The Walking Dead or Game of Thrones, etc. But what about The Walking Algae or Game of Cyanos?

A teaser: I mentioned algae on manatees. Dr. Tom Frankovich from FIU has actually looked into diatoms that live on manatees 'round these parts - super cool stuff. You may have noticed manatees that look a bit mossy. Let's amend that to "algae-y" and start singing, "Algae met a manatee. The manatee met algae." And they lived happily ever after.
D'aww. From: Fish and Wildlife Service

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Climate Change in Everglades National Park: Sea Level Rise

April 02, 2013 0