Holocene sediment records from World Heritage-listed K'gari/Fraser Island lakes (subtropical eastern Australia) highlight their sensitivity to drying

No Thumbnail Available
Date
2019-07-30
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA)
Abstract
Lakes are some of the most biodiverse, yet vulnerable, ecosystems on the planet. In Australia, the driest inhabited continent on earth, permanent lakes are relatively rare. By contrast, K'gari or Fraser Island, the largest sand island in the world, has a large number of permanent lakes and represents one of the few lake districts on the continent. The lakes of K'gari/Fraser island are remarkable because many are perched above the regional water table where an impermeable layer separates them from the sand below. They are one of the reasons why the island is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site. Holocene sediment sequences have now been analysed from at least six lakes on K'gari/Fraser Island. It appears that there was marked aridity on the island from c. 8000 to 5000 ka BP. Some lakes dried completely at a time previously thought to be characterised by humid climates in the Australian subtropics. Interestingly, in some sequences there is little to no physical evidence of drying which is recorded as a hiatus in the accumulation of highly organic, acidic, lake sediments. The mid-Holocene dry phase recorded on K'gari/Fraser Island contrasts with evidence from North Stradbroke Island, a similar sand island which also has perched lakes, approximately 150 km to the south. As a result, there is strong potential to infer the Holocene regional climatology of the Australian subtropics at small spatial scales from these records. Lastly, our study highlights a largely unrecognised vulnerability of lakes on K’gari to drying and indicates a need to better understand their hydrology and response to projected future climate change. © The Authors.
Description
Keywords
Quaternary period, Islands, Australia, Lakes, Ecosystems, Sediments, Humidity, Hydrology
Citation
Tibby, J., Barr, C., McInerney, F., Murphy, C., Raven, M., Leng, M., Tyler, J., Marshall, J., McGregor, G., & Gadd, P. (2019). Holocene sediment records from World Heritage-listed K'gari/Fraser Island lakes (subtropical eastern Australia) highlight their sensitivity to drying. Paper presented to the 20th INQUA Congress 25th - 31st July 2019, Dublin, Ireland. Retrieved from: https://virtual.oxfordabstracts.com/#/event/public/574/submission/1841