Julie Tolu
Umeå University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Julie Tolu.
Nature Communications | 2017
Andrea Garcia Bravo; Sylvain Bouchet; Julie Tolu; Erik Björn; Alejandro Mateos-Rivera; Stefan Bertilsson
A detailed understanding of the formation of the potent neurotoxic methylmercury is needed to explain the large observed variability in methylmercury levels in aquatic systems. While it is known that organic matter interacts strongly with mercury, the role of organic matter composition in the formation of methylmercury in aquatic systems remains poorly understood. Here we show that phytoplankton-derived organic compounds enhance mercury methylation rates in boreal lake sediments through an overall increase of bacterial activity. Accordingly, in situ mercury methylation defines methylmercury levels in lake sediments strongly influenced by planktonic blooms. In contrast, sediments dominated by terrigenous organic matter inputs have far lower methylation rates but higher concentrations of methylmercury, suggesting that methylmercury was formed in the catchment and imported into lakes. Our findings demonstrate that the origin and molecular composition of organic matter are critical parameters to understand and predict methylmercury formation and accumulation in boreal lake sediments.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Carsten Meyer-Jacob; Julie Tolu; Christian Bigler; Handong Yang; Richard Bindler
Significance Monitoring programs have recorded increases in organic carbon concentrations in northern lakes, which have important implications for water quality and ecosystem functioning. Current hypotheses interpret this trend in light of recent environmental changes such as acidification and climate but do not include an examination of long-term changes and their causes. We inferred past trends from sediment archives across central Sweden, allowing us to assess recent changes on a millennial scale. Our data demonstrate that a long-term decline beginning already in the 15th century preceded the recent organic carbon increase. This was a response to spatially extensive human–landscape interactions that included forest grazing and mire exploitation, which were common across Europe and altered carbon cycling between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Organic carbon concentrations have increased in surface waters across parts of Europe and North America during the past decades, but the main drivers causing this phenomenon are still debated. A lack of observations beyond the last few decades inhibits a better mechanistic understanding of this process and thus a reliable prediction of future changes. Here we present past lake-water organic carbon trends inferred from sediment records across central Sweden that allow us to assess the observed increase on a centennial to millennial time scale. Our data show the recent increase in lake-water carbon but also that this increase was preceded by a landscape-wide, long-term decrease beginning already A.D. 1450–1600. Geochemical and biological proxies reveal that these dynamics coincided with an intensification of human catchment disturbance that decreased over the past century. Catchment disturbance was driven by the expansion and later cessation of widespread summer forest grazing and farming across central Scandinavia. Our findings demonstrate that early land use strongly affected past organic carbon dynamics and suggest that the influence of historical landscape utilization on contemporary changes in lake-water carbon levels has thus far been underestimated. We propose that past changes in land use are also a strong contributing factor in ongoing organic carbon trends in other regions that underwent similar comprehensive changes due to early cultivation and grazing over centuries to millennia.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2015
Julie Tolu; Lorenz Gerber; Jean-François Boily; Richard Bindler
Molecular-level chemical information about organic matter (OM) in sediments helps to establish the sources of OM and the prevalent degradation/diagenetic processes, both essential for understanding the cycling of carbon (C) and of the elements associated with OM (toxic trace metals and nutrients) in lake ecosystems. Ideally, analytical methods for characterizing OM should allow high sample throughput, consume small amounts of sample and yield relevant chemical information, which are essential for multidisciplinary, high-temporal resolution and/or large spatial scale investigations. We have developed a high-throughput analytical method based on pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry and automated data processing to characterize sedimentary OM in sediments. Our method consumes 200 μg of freeze-dried and ground sediment sample. Pyrolysis was performed at 450°C, which was found to avoid degradation of specific biomarkers (e.g., lignin compounds, fresh carbohydrates/cellulose) compared to 650°C, which is in the range of temperatures commonly applied for environmental samples. The optimization was conducted using the top ten sediment samples of an annually resolved sediment record (containing 16-18% and 1.3-1.9% of total carbon and nitrogen, respectively). Several hundred pyrolytic compound peaks were detected of which over 200 were identified, which represent different classes of organic compounds (i.e., n-alkanes, n-alkenes, 2-ketones, carboxylic acids, carbohydrates, proteins, other N compounds, (methoxy)phenols, (poly)aromatics, chlorophyll and steroids/hopanoids). Technical reproducibility measured as relative standard deviation of the identified peaks in triplicate analyses was 5.5±4.3%, with 90% of the RSD values within 10% and 98% within 15%. Finally, a multivariate calibration model was calculated between the pyrolytic degradation compounds and the sediment depth (i.e., sediment age), which is a function of degradation processes and changes in OM source type. This allowed validation of the Py-GC/MS dataset against fundamental processes involved in OM cycling in aquatic ecosystems.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Sofia Ninnes; Julie Tolu; Carsten Meyer-Jacob; Tim M. Mighall; Richard Bindler
Organic matter (OM) is a key component of lake sediments, affecting carbon, nutrient, and trace metal cycling at local and global scales. Yet little is known about long-term (millennial) changes in ...
Science of The Total Environment | 2015
Sophia V. Hansson; Julie Tolu; Richard Bindler
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2018
Andrea G. Bravo; Sari Peura; Moritz Buck; Omneya Ahmed; Alejandro Mateos-Rivera; Sonia Herrero Ortega; Jeffra K. Schaefer; Sylvain Bouchet; Julie Tolu; Erik Björn; Stefan Bertilsson
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Sofia Ninnes; Julie Tolu; Carsten Meyer-Jacob; Tim M. Mighall; Richard Bindler
Biogeosciences | 2017
Julie Tolu; Johan Rydberg; Carsten Meyer-Jacob; Lorenz Gerber; Richard Bindler
Biogeosciences Discussions | 2016
Julie Tolu; Johan Rydberg; Carsten Meyer-Jacob; Lorenz Gerber; Richard Bindler
2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014
Julie Tolu