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Human impacts and Anthropocene environmental change at Lake Kutubu, a Ramsar wetland in Papua New Guinea

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-17, 01:27 authored by KE Long, L Schneider, SE Connor, N Shulmeister, J Finn, Georgia RobertsGeorgia Roberts, A Zawadzki, T Gabriel Enge, JP Smol, C Ballard, SG Haberle
The impacts of human-induced environmental change that characterize the Anthropocene are not felt equally across the globe. In the tropics, the potential for the sudden collapse of ecosystems in response to multiple interacting pressures has been of increasing concern in ecological and conservation research. The tropical ecosystems of Papua New Guinea are areas of diverse rainforest flora and fauna, inhabited by human populations that are equally diverse, both culturally and linguistically. These people and the ecosystems they rely on are being put under increasing pressure from mineral resource extraction, population growth, land clearing, invasive species, and novel pollutants. This study details the last ∼90 y of impacts on ecosystem dynamics in one of the most biologically diverse, yet poorly understood, tropical wetland ecosystems of the region. The lake is listed as a Ramsar wetland of international importance, yet, since initial European contact in the 1930s and the opening of mineral resource extraction facilities in the 1990s, there has been a dramatic increase in deforestation and an influx of people to the area. Using multiproxy paleoenvironmental records from lake sediments, we show how these anthropogenic impacts have transformed Lake Kutubu. The recent collapse of algal communities represents an ecological tipping point that is likely to have ongoing repercussions for this important wetland’s ecosystems. We argue that the incorporation of an adequate historical perspective into models for wetland management and conservation is critical in understanding how to mitigate the impacts of ecological catastrophes such as biodiversity loss.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

The Lake Kutubu Project was funded by the Department of Archaeology and Natural History at the Australian National University and the Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering Grants AINGRA08028 and AINGRA10113 obtained by S.G.H. The 210Pb dating was funded through Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Institution Research Portal Proposal AP12071.

History

Publication Date

2021-10-05

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume

118

Issue

40

Article Number

e2022216118

Pagination

7p.

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

ISSN

0027-8424

Rights Statement

© The Authors 2021

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