Freshwater diatoms in the Sajama, Quelccaya, and Coropuna glaciers of the South American Andes

Diatoms in ice cores have been used to infer regional and global climatic events. These archives offer high-resolution records of past climate events, often providing annual resolution of environmental variability during the Late Holocene. Recently, the first low-latitude tropical diatoms were descr...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Diatom research Vol. 32; no. 2; pp. 153 - 162
Main Authors: Weide, D. Marie, Fritz, Sherilyn C., Brinson, Bruce E., Thompson, Lonnie G., Billups, W. Edward
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Nottingham Taylor & Francis 03-04-2017
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Diatoms in ice cores have been used to infer regional and global climatic events. These archives offer high-resolution records of past climate events, often providing annual resolution of environmental variability during the Late Holocene. Recently, the first low-latitude tropical diatoms were described from the Quelccaya Summit Dome. Here, we document diatoms observed in ice cores from Quelccaya, spanning AD 1300 to 1815, along with those from two additional glaciers (Coropuna, and Sajama glaciers) in the tropical Andes, spanning AD 1764 to 1814. Diatom assemblages recovered from these three sites were rare, but differ in abundance and species composition through time. Assemblages are characterized by cosmopolitan and aerophilic species, mostly pennate diatoms. There were 44 taxa in all, with Pinnularia cf. borealis Ehrenberg being the most common species encountered in the samples. Eleven taxa were found at all three sites. Both Coropuna and Sajama had taxa that were unique to these locations, whereas Quelccaya had no unique taxa. Due to the rarity of diatoms and the cosmopolitan nature of the dominant species, it is not possible to determine their origin, limiting their utility in paleoclimate reconstructions.
ISSN:0269-249X
2159-8347
DOI:10.1080/0269249X.2017.1335240