INVESTIGADORES
MASSAFERRO Julieta
artículos
Título:
Using a newly developed chironomid transfer function for reconstructing mean annual temperature at Lake Potrok Aike, Patagonia, Argentina
Autor/es:
MASSAFERRO AND LAROCQUE TOBLER
Revista:
ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2013 vol. 24 p. 201 - 210
ISSN:
1470-160X
Resumen:
In the Southern Hemisphere, the lack of quantitative temperature records hampers the understanding of climate change since the Last Glaciation and refrains the comparison with the Northern Hemisphere records. To provide quantitative data, a 63-lake chironomid transfer functions was developed in Patagonia. Mean annual air temperature (MAT) was one of the most important factors explaining the distribution of chironomids while precipitation did not have any significant relationship with chironomid assemblages. The MAT model had a r2 of 0.64, a RMSE of 0.83 and a maximum bias of 1.81°C, comparable to other transfer functions of this size. This model was applied to the Lake Potrok Aike (PTA) chironomid records which consisted of only four taxa (Phaenopsectra, Cricotopus, Smittia and Polypedilum). The chironomid-inferred air temperatures were colder-thanthe- average (10.8°C) during the Late glacial with the coldest temperatures (9°C in average) during the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR). Between ca. 8,000 to 3,500 cal. years BP, the chironomid-inferred air temperatures were warmer-than-the-average with a decreasing trend. From ca. 3,500 cal. years BP to the present, the chironomid-inferred temperatures oscillated around the average. The difference between the chironomid-inferred air temperature in the surface sample and the climate normal (1961- 1990) was 0.6°C, suggesting that chironomids are sensitive enough to quantitatively reconstruct MAT at PTA. The general pattern of temperature changes reconstructed by the PTA chironomid record corresponded well to other quantitative records in the Southern Hemisphere. The results presented here show that investing in the development of chironomid transfer functions for quantitative climate research in the Southern Hemisphere is valuable