Research Outputs

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication
    Abundance and distribution of plant derived leaf waxes (long chain n-alkanes & fatty acids) from lake surface sediments along the west coast of southern South America: Implications for environmental and climate reconstructions
    (Science of The Total Environment, 2023) ;
    Werne, Josef
    ;
    Araneda, A.
    ;
    Tejos, Eduardo
    ;
    Moscoso, J.
    Southern South America is the only large landmass that extends through the core of the Southern Westerly Winds (SWW), controlling hydrological and ecosystem variability in the region. In fact, the vegetation along the west coast changes from Temperate and Valdivian Rain Forest to the North Patagonian Evergreen Forest (ca. 42°S) due to the latitudinal influence of the SWW. Climate is an important driver of organic matter accumulation in lakes, hence changes in vegetation would be recorded in lacustrine sedimentary archives. This study evaluated leaf waxes contained in lake surface sediments as indicators of climate change along the west coast of southern South America, providing a biogeochemical dataset for ongoing and future (paleo)climate and environmental research. The fatty acid and n-alkane sediment leaf wax datasets are compared with latitudinal, orographic, and climatic (Mean Annual air Temperature [MAT] & Precipitation [MAP]) trends extracted from a monthly gridded reanalysis product of the Climate Forecast System Reanalysis. Fatty acids are more abundant than n-alkanes, with high abundances characterizing the transition between seasonal and year-round precipitation along the coast (ca. 42°S). The abundance of both leaf wax groups increases with MAP, suggesting precipitation as the main control on sedimentary leaf wax delivery to the lake sediments in the study area. The Carbon Preference Index (CPI) of the two groups show opposite trends, but both highlight the climate transition at ca. 42°S, and have a linear relationship with MAP. The opposite significant trends between n-alkane CPI and fatty acid CPI with MAP are interpreted as higher n-alkane production at much higher precipitation because leaf wax fatty acids are the precursors of n-alkanes. Hence, past periods during which these leaf waxes show opposite trends in CPI might be interpreted as a precipitation change, especially if additional information such as pollen, diatoms, chironomids and stable isotopes is available.
  • Publication
    A molecular isotope record of climate variability and vegetation response in southwestern North America during mid-Pleistocene glacial/interglacial cycles
    (Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2016) ;
    Werne, Josef
    ;
    Brown, Erik
    ;
    Anderson, Scott
    ;
    Fawcett, Peter
    Climate variability during Pleistocene glacial/interglacial transitions is well documented in marine and ice-sheet isotopic records, but terrestrial records showing the continental response to these transitions are scarce, especially for earlier in the Pleistocene. Cyclic intervals of warm interglacial and cold glacial conditions preserved in terrestrial records such as lake sediments provide opportunities to probe the biosphere's response to climate change. In this study, we track climate and plant type changes, specifically the presence of C3 and C4 plants, using the abundance and δ13C signatures of leaf waxes in paleolacustrine sediments from Valles Caldera in New Mexico. Through these changes, weassess there sponse of vegetation to climate variability in southwestern North America through two mid-Pleistocene glacial/interglacial transitions (Marine Isotope Stage [MIS] 14/13 and 12/11). Leaf wax data show that the C3 forest taxa were dominant through the entire record whereas C4 plants, better adapted to warm conditions and competitive under water stress, are favored during warming and extended arid periods during interglacials. The δ13C signature in leaf wax n-alkanes suggests that C4 plants persisted in the water shed throughout the interglacials and that some summer rainfall (which is required to support C4 grasses) was maintained even during prolonged dry periods. The abundance and carbon isotope composition of leaf waxes together with new MBT/CBT (methylation index of branched tetraethers/cyclization index of branched tetraethers) temperature data confirm warmer and more arid conditions during MIS 13 than during MIS 11, in spite of relatively low greenhouse gas concentrations during MIS 13. This suggests that variations in incoming solar radiation have played a major role in regulating the surface temperature, regional hydrological systems and vegetation in southwestern North America, likely through changes in the North American Monsoon coupled with variations in the location of the mid-latitude westerlies.