Hydro-climatic variation drives the long-term ecological evolution of
neotropical floodplain lakes: an example from the Magdalena River
system, Colombia
Abstract
The Magdalena River in Colombia and its floodplain lakes are key
ecosystems for the subsistence of Colombian society. Yet, hydrologic
regulation, pollution, deforestation and climate change are threatening
its ecological integrity. To understand how these floodplain lakes
respond over decadal-centennial scales to natural and anthropogenic
stressors, we selected two shallow lakes with varying degree of
connectivity to the River and assessed their historical ecological and
limnological change through a multi-proxy analysis of diatoms,
geochemistry and lake’s morphometric variation resulting from extreme
periods of high floods and droughts. The reconstruction of the more
isolated San Juana Lake covered the last c.500 years. It showed
riverine-flooded conditions from c.1555-1741 characterised by high
detrital inputs, reductive conditions, and dominance of planktonic
diatoms. From c.1758-1954, the riverine meander became disconnected,
conveying into a marsh-like environment rich in aerophil diatoms and
organic matter. The current lake was then formed around the mid 1960s
and a diverse lake-associated diatom flora developed. Lake waters became
more oxygenated, while sedimentation and nutrients increased through
time since the lake formation. The reconstruction for Barbacoas Lake, a
waterbody directly connected to the Magdalena River, spanned the last 60
years and showed alternating riverine-wetland-lake conditions dominated
by planktonic and benthic diatoms respectively. An exception was however
observed, during a prolonged period of low rainfall between 1989-1992,
where the lake almost desiccated and where aerophil diatoms prevailed.
Inferences of flood magnitudes and river connectivity in the lakes were
supported by parallel increases in Zr/Fe (flooding) and detrital inputs
(Ti/Ca) along with decreases in sedimentary OM. We proposed that lake
hydrological connectivity to the Magdalena River is a main factor
controlling lake long-term responses to human pressures. Highly
connected lakes may respond more acutely to ENSO events while isolated
lakes might be more sensitive to local land-use changes.