Fossil fish species and assemblage are relevant integrative paleo-biogeo-archives in ancient lakes
- (olga.otero@univ-poitiers.fr)
In paleontological context, fish remains are frequently collected and constitute a large part of the lake macro-fossil assemblages. In the presentation, examples from continental Africa chosen in lakes of different dimension, shape and history (mainly Malawi, Chad and Turkana) will illustrate how fish fossil study potentially provides a wide range of information on the paleoenvironment (water salinity, temperature, oxygenation, seasonality, etc.) and the paleogeography (watershed connections) of the lake and its basin. It is based on the knowledge of the ecology and phylogeny of the species and through dedicated biogeochemical and sclerochronological studies of their bones and teeth that also constitute paleo-bio-archives that recorded certain environmental information. Alongside the results extracted from each dedicated study, their combination provide new information and show the gain of extracting different and independent informations from the same object or from objects from the same assemblage, and notably in the case of lake-fish assemblages. For example, the combination of the knowledge on a fish paleo-ecology in a lake with results of a biogeochemical study of their remains can evidence change in the hydrographical regime between successive lake deposits. Finally, fish study also allow an interpolation of change in paleoenvironments at different time scales and their integrative study as paleoenvironmental proxy should be more widely included in the evolution of lakes in the past. The multi-time scale and proxy study enabled on fossil fish is sensible for transfer to predict modern lake evolution.
How to cite: Otero, O.: Fossil fish species and assemblage are relevant integrative paleo-biogeo-archives in ancient lakes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16142, 2021.
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