Nutrient
over-enrichment is one of the classic triggering mechanisms
for the occurrence of cyanobacteria blooms in aquatic ecosystems.
In the Baltic Sea, cyanobacteria regularly occur in the late summer
months and form nuisance accumulations in surface waters and their
abundance has intensified significantly in the past 50 years attributed
to human-induced eutrophication. However, the natural occurrence of
cyanobacteria during the Holocene is debated. In this study, we present
records of cyanobacteria pigments, water column redox proxies, and
nitrogen isotopic signatures for the past ca. 8000 years from Baltic
Sea sediment cores. Our results demonstrate that cyanobacteria abundance
and nitrogen fixation are correlated with hypoxia occurring during
three main intervals: (1) ca. 7000–4000 B.P. during the Littorina
transgression, (2) ca. 1400–700 B.P. during the Medieval Climate
Anomaly, and (3) from ca. 1950 A.D. to the present. Issues of preservation
were investigated, and we show that organic matter and pigment profiles
are not simply an artifact of preservation. These results suggest
that cyanobacteria abundance is sustained during periods of hypoxia,
most likely because of enhanced recycling of phosphorus in low oxygen
conditions.
We demonstrate the use of Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIRS) to make quantitative measures of total organic carbon (TOC), total inorganic carbon (TIC) and biogenic silica (BSi) concentrations in sediment. FTIRS is a fast and costeffective technique and only small sediment samples are needed (0.01 g). Statistically significant models were developed using sediment samples from northern Sweden and were applied to sediment records from Sweden, northeast Siberia and Macedonia. The correlation between FTIRS-inferred values and amounts of biogeochemical constituents assessed conventionally varied between r = 0.84-0.99 for TOC, r = 0.85-0.99 for TIC, and r = 0.68-0.94 for BSi. Because FTIR spectra contain information on a large number of both inorganic and organic components, there is great potential for FTIRS to become an important tool in paleolimnology.
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