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Ecological Applications | 2007

HISTORICAL EUTROPHICATION IN A RIVER-ESTUARY COMPLEX IN MID-COAST MAINE

Dörte Köster; John Lichter; Peter D. Lea; Andrea Nurse

European settlement of New England brought about a novel disturbance regime that impacted rivers and estuaries through overfishing, deforestation, dams, and water pollution. The negative consequences of these activities intensified with industrialization in the 19th and 20th centuries, often resulting in ecosystem degradation. Since environmental legislation was implemented in the 1970s, improvement in water quality has been tangible and widespread; however, ecological recovery can require substantial amounts of time and may never be complete. To document the natural baseline conditions and investigate the recovery of a severely degraded river-estuary complex in mid-coast Maine, we examined diatoms, pollen, total organic carbon, total nitrogen, stable isotopes, total phosphorus, biogenic silica, and trace metals in intertidal sediments and established a chronology with 14C, 210Pb, and indicator pollen horizons. Both climate variability and human effects were evident in the sedimentary record of Merrymeeting Bay, the freshwater tidal portion of the Kennebec estuary. Natural climate variability was apparent in an episode of high sedimentation and altered diatom abundance during the 12th and 13th centuries and in changing pollen abundances between the 16th and 19th centuries, indicative of regional cooling. During the 18th century, colonial land clearance began an era of high sedimentation and eutrophication that strongly intensified with industrialization during the late 19th and 20th centuries. Improvements in water quality over the past 30 years in response to environmental regulation had little effect on ecosystem recovery as represented by the sedimentary record. Diatom composition and productivity and high fluxes of organic C, total P, and biogenic Si in recent sediments indicate that rates of nutrient loading remain high. These environmental proxies imply that aquatic productivity in Merrymeeting Bay was originally nutrient limited and water clarity high, relative to today. Further recovery may require more stringent regulation of nutrient inputs from industrial and municipal point sources. This historical study can contribute to public debate about the environmental management of this unusual river-estuary complex by describing its long-term natural baseline, thereby illustrating the upper limit of its potential for recovery.


Northeastern Naturalist | 2016

Younger Dryas Paleoenvironments and Ice Dynamics in Northern Maine: A Multi-Proxy, Case History

Ann C. Dieffenbacher-Krall; Harold W. Borns; Andrea Nurse; Geneva E.C. Langley; Sean D. Birkel; Les C. Cwynar; Lisa A. Doner; Christopher C. Dorion; James L. Fastook; George L. Jacobson; Christopher Sayles

Abstract Geological evidence for modeled Younger Dryas ice expansion in northern Maine is assessed in conjunction with temperature and precipitation estimates from chironomids and pollen, and plant macrofossil and lake-level analyses from lake sediment. Pollen and chironomid temperature and precipitation transfer-function estimates for the Allerød warming period indicate colder winters, precipitation levels half that of modern times, and summer temperatures near modern levels. The combination of cold winters and low precipitation prevented forest establishment in northern Maine along the Maine/New Brunswick border. While winter temperatures and precipitation remained stable, summer temperatures decreased as much as 7.5 °C during the Younger Dryas stadial, forcing a shift from shrub-dominated to sedge-dominated tundra. Summer and winter temperatures, as well as annual precipitation, increased rapidly at the Holocene onset.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2005

Late-Glacial and Holocene Record of Lake Levels of Mathews Pond and Whitehead Lake, Northern Maine, USA

Ann C. Dieffenbacher-Krall; Andrea Nurse


Hydrobiologia | 2016

Phytoplankton responses to nitrogen enrichment in Pacific Northwest, USA Mountain Lakes

Jason J. Williams; Marc Beutel; Andrea Nurse; Barry C. Moore; Stephanie E. Hampton; Jasmine E. Saros


Quaternary Research | 2011

Use of CART analysis to differentiate pollen of red pine (Pinus resinosa) and jack pine (P. banksiana) in New England

Andrew M. Barton; Andrea Nurse; Katelyn Michaud; Sarah W. Hardy


Journal of Quaternary Science | 2014

The relative controls on forest fires and fuel source fluctuations in the Holocene deciduous forests of southern Wisconsin, USA

Joshua R. Mueller; Colin J. Long; Joseph J. Williams; Andrea Nurse; Kendra K. McLauchlan


Journal of Vegetation Science | 2014

Holocene fire regimes, vegetation and biogeochemistry of an ecotone site in the Great Lakes Region of North America

Jesse L. Morris; Joshua R. Mueller; Andrea Nurse; Colin J. Long; Kendra K. McLauchlan


Biogeochemistry | 2016

Effects of glaciers on nutrient concentrations and phytoplankton in lakes within the Northern Cascades Mountains (USA)

Jason J. Williams; Andrea Nurse; Jasmine E. Saros; Jon Riedel; Marc Beutel


Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2017

Pollen and phytolith paleoecology in the St. Louis River Estuary, Minnesota, USA, with special consideration of Zizania palustris L.

Andrea Nurse; Euan D. Reavie; Jammi L. Ladwig; Chad Yost


International Journal of Climatology | 2018

Regional variation in Holocene climate quantified from pollen in the Great Plains of North America

Julie L. Commerford; Eric C. Grimm; Christopher J. Morris; Andrea Nurse; Ivanka Stefanova; Kendra K. McLauchlan

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Chad Yost

University of Arizona

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Mark B. Edlund

Science Museum of Minnesota

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Robert W Pillsbury

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Colin J. Long

University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh

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