Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes

High Arctic environments are particularly sensitive to climate changes, but retrieval of paleoecological data is challenging due to low productivity and biomass. At the same time, Arctic soils and sediments have proven exceptional for long-term DNA preservation due to their constantly low temperatur...

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Main Authors: Epp, L., Gussarova, G., Boessenkool, S., Olsen, J., Haile, James, Schrøder-Nielsen, A., Ludikova, A., Hassel, K., Stenøien, H., Funder, S., Willerslev, E., Kjær, K., Brochmann, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pergamon 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11604
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author Epp, L.
Gussarova, G.
Boessenkool, S.
Olsen, J.
Haile, James
Schrøder-Nielsen, A.
Ludikova, A.
Hassel, K.
Stenøien, H.
Funder, S.
Willerslev, E.
Kjær, K.
Brochmann, C.
author_facet Epp, L.
Gussarova, G.
Boessenkool, S.
Olsen, J.
Haile, James
Schrøder-Nielsen, A.
Ludikova, A.
Hassel, K.
Stenøien, H.
Funder, S.
Willerslev, E.
Kjær, K.
Brochmann, C.
author_sort Epp, L.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description High Arctic environments are particularly sensitive to climate changes, but retrieval of paleoecological data is challenging due to low productivity and biomass. At the same time, Arctic soils and sediments have proven exceptional for long-term DNA preservation due to their constantly low temperatures. Lake sediments contain DNA paleorecords of the surrounding ecosystems and can be used to retrieve a variety of organismal groups from a single sample. In this study, we analyzed vascular plant, bryophyte, algal (in particular diatom) and copepod DNA retrieved from a sediment core spanning the Holocene, taken from Bliss Lake on the northernmost coast of Greenland. A previous multi-proxy study including microscopic diatom analyses showed that this lake experienced changes between marine and lacustrine conditions. We inferred the same environmental changes from algal DNA preserved in the sediment core. Our DNA record was stratigraphically coherent, with no indication of leaching between layers, and our cross-taxon comparisons were in accordance with previously inferred local ecosystem changes. Authentic ancient plant DNA was retrieved from nearly all layers, both from the marine and the limnic phases, and distinct temporal changes in plant presence were recovered. The plant DNA was mostly in agreement with expected vegetation history, but very early occurrences of vascular plants, including the woody Empetrum nigrum, document terrestrial vegetation very shortly after glacial retreat. Our study shows that multi-taxon metabarcoding of sedimentary ancient DNA from lake cores is a valuable tool both for terrestrial and aquatic paleoecology, even in low-productivity ecosystems such as the High Arctic.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2015
publisher Pergamon
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-116042018-03-29T09:05:57Z Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes Epp, L. Gussarova, G. Boessenkool, S. Olsen, J. Haile, James Schrøder-Nielsen, A. Ludikova, A. Hassel, K. Stenøien, H. Funder, S. Willerslev, E. Kjær, K. Brochmann, C. Greenland Copepods Sedimentary DNA Metabarcoding Diatoms Bryophytes Vegetation history High Arctic environments are particularly sensitive to climate changes, but retrieval of paleoecological data is challenging due to low productivity and biomass. At the same time, Arctic soils and sediments have proven exceptional for long-term DNA preservation due to their constantly low temperatures. Lake sediments contain DNA paleorecords of the surrounding ecosystems and can be used to retrieve a variety of organismal groups from a single sample. In this study, we analyzed vascular plant, bryophyte, algal (in particular diatom) and copepod DNA retrieved from a sediment core spanning the Holocene, taken from Bliss Lake on the northernmost coast of Greenland. A previous multi-proxy study including microscopic diatom analyses showed that this lake experienced changes between marine and lacustrine conditions. We inferred the same environmental changes from algal DNA preserved in the sediment core. Our DNA record was stratigraphically coherent, with no indication of leaching between layers, and our cross-taxon comparisons were in accordance with previously inferred local ecosystem changes. Authentic ancient plant DNA was retrieved from nearly all layers, both from the marine and the limnic phases, and distinct temporal changes in plant presence were recovered. The plant DNA was mostly in agreement with expected vegetation history, but very early occurrences of vascular plants, including the woody Empetrum nigrum, document terrestrial vegetation very shortly after glacial retreat. Our study shows that multi-taxon metabarcoding of sedimentary ancient DNA from lake cores is a valuable tool both for terrestrial and aquatic paleoecology, even in low-productivity ecosystems such as the High Arctic. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11604 10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.03.027 Pergamon restricted
spellingShingle Greenland
Copepods
Sedimentary DNA
Metabarcoding
Diatoms
Bryophytes
Vegetation history
Epp, L.
Gussarova, G.
Boessenkool, S.
Olsen, J.
Haile, James
Schrøder-Nielsen, A.
Ludikova, A.
Hassel, K.
Stenøien, H.
Funder, S.
Willerslev, E.
Kjær, K.
Brochmann, C.
Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
title Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
title_full Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
title_fullStr Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
title_full_unstemmed Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
title_short Lake sediment multi-taxon DNA from North Greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
title_sort lake sediment multi-taxon dna from north greenland records early post-glacial appearance of vascular plants and accurately tracks environmental changes
topic Greenland
Copepods
Sedimentary DNA
Metabarcoding
Diatoms
Bryophytes
Vegetation history
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11604