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Catchment disturbance inferred from paleolimnological studies of three contrasted sub-humid environments in Morocco
Authors:R J Flower  A C Stevenson  J A Dearing  I D L Foster  A Airey  B Rippey  J P F Wilson  P G Appleby
Institution:(1) Palaeoecology Research Unit, Department of Geography, University College London, 26 Bedford Way, WC1H OAP London, UK;(2) Department of Geography, Coventry Polytechnic, CV1 FB1 Coventry, UK;(3) Freshwater Laboratory, University of Ulster, BT45 6LR Magherafelt, Northern Ireland;(4) Anthala, Batiment E, 2039, Chemin de St. Claude, 06600 Antibes, France;(5) Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Liverpool, L69 3BX Liverpool, UK
Abstract:Paleolimnological techniques for assessing recent drainage basin disturbance are evaluated in three Moroccan lakes with catchments contrasted in terms of land-use and vegetation. Rates of sediment accumulation in the two lakes with agricultural catchments were relatively high (>1.6 cm yr-1) in the most recent past. Dilution effects prevented core dating by the 210Pb method alone and post-1953 chronologies were constructed by combining 210Pb and 137Cs data. The recent sediment accumulation rate at the currently least disturbed site, where natural Cedrus forest is still abundant, was relatively low (<0.4 cm yr-1) but has increased since the mid-19th century.Magnetic, geochemical, pollen, and diatom studies of all three lake sediment cores linked with modern field survey data show that soil erosion in the most vegetationally disturbed catchment (Dayat-er-Roumi) has been high throughout the recent past and that intensity peaks are probably associated with wetland drainage operations beginning in the 1940's. At the partially forested site (Dayat Affougah), pre-1950's woodland clearance and other land-use changes are the likely cause of past major soil erosion episodes. The site currently dominated by natural Cedrus forest (Lac Azigza) shows only minor disturbance during the past c. 150 years although a major soil erosion episode occrred in the 17th century.Paleolimnological analysis has clearly demonstrated that major landscape change has occurred at all three sites. However, only at the two sites with catchment cultivation do previously accelerated soil erosion and lake sediment accumulation rates persist to the present. Information essential for formulation of appropriate management plans is presented and the importance of paleolimnology in assessing man-induced lake-catchment disturbance is stressed.
Keywords:catchment disturbance  sediment cores  magnetic minerals  geochemistry  pollen  diatoms  Morocco
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