Analysis of relationship between soil erosion and lake deposition during the Holocene in Xingyun Lake, southwestern China

Author:

Zhao Hongfei1ORCID,Zhou Jie2,Sun Qianli3,Delang Claudio O4,Mokhtar Ali1,Ma Yue1,He Hongming15

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Soil Erosion and Dryland Farming on Loess Plateau, Institute of Soil and Water Conservation, Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University; Chinese Academy of Sciences & Ministry of Water Resources, China

2. Kunming Branch, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

3. State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, East China Normal University, China

4. Department of Geography, Faculty of Social Sciences, Hong Kong Baptist University, China

5. Key Lab of Geographic Information Sciences of MOE, School of Geographic Sciences, Faculty of Geosciences, East China Normal University, China

Abstract

Quantifying the relative influences of anthropogenic activities and climate change on soil erosion and deposition during the Holocene, when both forces have been interacting is a complex problem. Analysis of long-term patterns in soil erosion and lake deposition in a basin can provide the basis for untangling the complexities of climate and anthropogenic forcings. In this paper, sedimentary sequences from Xingyun Lake are compared with simulated soil erosion rates in the basin to explore the relationship between river basin soil erosion and lake deposition during the Holocene in Yunnan, China. Modern soil erosion rates are calculated using RUSLE, while Holocene soil erosion rates are estimated using modern rates with reconstructed precipitation and vegetation cover sequences. Through this investigation, we found the following results. First, Holocene vegetation in the lake basin was mainly affected by climate change, and the vegetation experienced the same pattern of changes as the climate. Soil erosion and lake deposition rates, along with changes to vegetation cover, were synchronous with precipitation trends during the Holocene. Second, soil erosion and lake deposition have been exacerbated by human activities, such as deforestation and land reclamation in the Xingyun Lake basin. Finally, this study provides new insights into the effects by anthropogenic impacts and climate forcing on the processes of soil erosion and lake deposition on the millennium scale.

Funder

national key research and development program of china

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archaeology,Global and Planetary Change

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