4.3 Article

Twentieth century eutrophication of the St. Croix River (Minnesota-Wisconsin, USA) reconstructed from the sediments of its natural impoundment

Journal

JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 641-657

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10933-008-9296-1

Keywords

Biogenic silica; Diatoms; Fossil pigments; Gulf of Mexico; Hypoxia; Mississippi River; Nutrients; Paleolimnology; Phosphorus

Funding

  1. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
  2. Metropolitan Council Environmental Services (MCES)
  3. NSERC Canada

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Evaluation of land-use effects on coastal and marine ecosystems requires better understanding of the role of rivers in regulating mass transport from terrestrial to oceanic environments. Here we take advantage of the presence of a riverine lake to use paleoecological techniques to quantify impacts of logging, European-style agriculture, urbanization and continued terrestrial disturbance on mass transport and water quality in the northern drainage of the Mississippi River. Two 2-m sediment-cores recovered in 1999 from Lake St. Croix, a natural impoundment of the St. Croix River, were dated using Pb-210 and Cs-137, and analyzed for historical changes (c. 1840-present) in sediment magnetic susceptibility, inorganic and organic matter content, biogenic silica, fossil pigments, and diatom microfossils. Inorganic sediment accumulation increased threefold between the mid-1800s and present, whereas clear signs of eutrophication were only evident after the mid-twentieth century when biogenic silica accumulation increased sixfold, diatom accumulation rates increased 20- to 50- fold, and the diatom community shifted from predominantly benthic species to assemblages composed mainly of planktonic taxa. Similarly, fossil pigment concentrations increased during the 1960s, and diatom-inferred total phosphorus (DI-TP) increased from similar to 30 mu g TP l(-1) c. 1910 to similar to 60 mu g l(-1) since 1990, similar to historical records since 1980. Together, these patterns demonstrate that initial land clearance did not result in substantive declines in water quality or nutrient mass transport, instead, substantial degradation of downstream environments was restricted to the latter half of the twentieth century.

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