Stratigraphic Evidence of Human Disturbance in an Estuary
- 1 July 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 22 (1) , 91-108
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(84)90009-7
Abstract
Prior to European settlement, oligohaline and mesohaline sections of Chesapeake Bay draining Piedmont saprolite supported diverse and abundant diatom and macrophyte populations. Compositional changes in diatoms and macrophytes in oligohaline sections correspond with 17th- and 19th-century deforestation and increased siltation, while effects on downstream populations were less notable. After deforestation, previously sparse diatom populations in a mesohaline estuary draining sandy Coastal Plain soils became more abundant. Fertilization of cultivated land was accompanied by increased production of both attached and free-floating diatoms. After the discharge of sewage, diatom populations increased enormously in the affected areas, followed by a dramatic decrease. The decrease suggests silica limitation after intense phosphorus enrichment. The loss of macrophytes and increase in planktonic diatoms in oligohaline areas in recent years resemble the historical sequences observed in lakes undergoing eutrophication. However, in the estuary, similar declines have also occurred in macrophyte populations in mesohaline areas where eutrophication is much less severe, but where chlorine and herbicide toxicity during the past 20 yr is similar to upstream areas.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparative Influences of Light and Temperature on the Growth and Metabolism of Selected Submersed Freshwater MacrophytesEcological Monographs, 1981
- The Possible Importance of Silicon in Marine EutrophicationMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1980
- Aspects of the Population Dynamics of the Polychaete Sabellaria vulgaris Verrill, in the Delaware BayEstuaries, 1978
- A mechanism to account for macrophyte decline in progressively eutrophicated freshwatersAquatic Botany, 1978
- Human Disturbance and the Historical Development of Linsley PondEcology, 1978
- Dissolution of Diatom Frustules and Recycling of Amorphous Silicon in Lake MichiganJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1977
- Nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization of aquatic vascular plants and algae in replicated ponds I. Initial response to fertilizationHydrobiologia, 1976
- The Chestnut Pollen Decline as a Time Horizon in Lake Sediments in Eastern North AmericaCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1974
- Ecophysiology of Ambrosia Artemisiifolia: A Successional DominantEcology, 1974
- Temperature and Rooted Aquatic PlantsChesapeake Science, 1969