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Climate change of anthropogenic origin is affecting Earth’s biodiversity and therefore ecosystems and their services. High latitude ecosystems are even more impacted than the rest of Northern Hemisphere because of the amplified polar warming. Still, it is challenging to predict the dynamics of high latitude ecosystems because of complex interaction between abiotic and biotic components. As the past is the key to the future, the interpretation of past ecological changes to better understand ongoing processes is possible. In the Quaternary, the Pleistocene experienced several glacial and interglacial stages that affected past ecosystems. During the last Glacial, the Pleistocene steppe-tundra was covering most of unglaciated northern hemisphere and disappeared in parallel to the megafauna’s extinction at the transition to the Holocene (~11,700 years ago). The origin of the steppe-tundra decline is not well understood and knowledge on the mechanisms, which caused shifts in past communities and ecosystems, is of high priority as they are likely comparable to those affecting modern ecosystems. Lake or permafrost core sediments can be retrieved to investigate past biodiversity at transitions between glacial and interglacial stages. Siberia and Beringia were the origin of dispersal of the steppe-tundra, which make investigation this area of high priority. Until recently, macrofossils and pollen were the most common approaches. They are designed to reconstruct past composition changes but have limit and biases. Since the end of the 20th century, sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) can also be investigated. My main objectives were, by using sedaDNA approaches to provide scientific evidence of compositional and diversity changes in the Northern Hemisphere ecosystems at the transition between Quaternary glacial and interglacial stages.
In this thesis, I provide snapshots of entire ancient ecosystems and describe compositional changes between Quaternary glacial and interglacial stages, and confirm the vegetation composition and the spatial and temporal boundaries of the Pleistocene steppe-tundra. I identify a general loss of plant diversity with extinction events happening in parallel of megafauna’ extinction. I demonstrate how loss of biotic resilience led to the collapse of a previously well-established system and discuss my results in regards to the ongoing climate change. With further work to constrain biases and limits, sedaDNA can be used in parallel or even replace the more established macrofossils and pollen approaches as my results support the robustness and potential of sedaDNA to answer new palaeoecological questions such as plant diversity changes, loss and provide snapshots of entire ancient biota.
Climate change and human-driven eutrophication promote the spread of harmful cyanobacteria blooms in lakes worldwide, which affects water quality and impairs the aquatic food chain. In recent times, sedimentary ancient DNA-based (sedaDNA) studies were used to probe how centuries of climate and environmental changes have affected cyanobacterial assemblages in temperate lakes. However, there is a lack of information on the consistency between sediment-deposited cyanobacteria communities versus those of the water column, and on the individual role of natural climatic changes versus human pressure on cyanobacteria community dynamics over multi-millennia time scales.
Therefore, this thesis uses sedimentary ancient DNA of Lake Tiefer See in northeastern Germany to trace the deposition of cyanobacteria along the water column into the sediment, and to reconstruct cyanobacteria communities spanning the last 11,000 years using a set of molecular techniques including quantitative PCR, biomarkers, metabarcoding, and metagenome sequence analyses.
The results of this thesis proved that cyanobacterial composition and species richness did not significantly differ among different water depths, sediment traps, and surface sediments. This means that the cyanobacterial community composition from the sediments reflects the water column communities. However, there is a skewed sediment deposition of different cyanobacteria groups because of DNA alteration and/or deterioration during transport along the water column to the sediment. Specifically, single filament taxa, such as Planktothrix, are poorly represented in sediments despite being abundant in the water column as shown by an additional study of the thesis on cyanobacteria seasonality. In contrast, aggregate-forming taxa, like Aphanizomenon, are relatively overrepresented in sediment although they are not abundant in the water column. These different deposition patterns of cyanobacteria taxa should be considered in future DNA-based paleolimnological investigations. The thesis also reveals a substantial increase in total cyanobacteria abundance during the Bronze Age which is not apparent in prior phases of the early to middle Holocene and is suggested to be caused by human farming, deforestation, and excessive nutrient addition to the lake. Not only cyanobacterial abundance was influenced by human activity but also cyanobacteria community composition differed significantly between phases of no, moderate, and intense human impact.
The data presented in this thesis are the first on sedimentary cyanobacteria DNA since the early Holocene in a temperate lake. The results bring together archaeological, historical climatic, and limnological data with deep DNA-sequencing and paleoecology to reveal a legacy impact of human pressure on lake cyanobacteria populations dating back to approximately 4000 years.