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Ulrike Herzschuh - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Aquatic macrophyte dynamics in Lake Karakul (Eastern Pamir) over the last 29 cal ka revealed by sedimentary ancient DNA and geochemical analyses of macrofossil remains
    Journal of Paleolimnology, 2017
    Co-Authors: Liv Heinecke, Steffen Mischke, Laura S. Epp, Maria Reschke, Kathleen R. Stoof-leichsenring, Birgit Plessen, Ulrike Herzschuh
    Abstract:

    Due to methodological challenges there are only a few studies that focus on macrophyte dynamics in large lakes despite their notable role in a lake’s ecosystem functioning. This study investigates composition and productivity changes of the submerged vegetation of Lake Karakul, Pamir Mountains (Tajikistan), using sedimentary ancient DNA metabarcoding and elemental (C/N) and isotopic (δ13C, δ15N) measurements of Stuckenia cf. pamirica (Baagoe) Z. Kaplan (Potamogetonaceae) leaf remains. No Stuckenia cf. pamirica leaf remains were found for 28.7–26.1 cal ka BP, when both Potamogetonaceae and Chara (L.) DNA sequences were recorded, suggesting sparse submerged vegetation at the coring site. This agrees with the inference of a deep lake reached using geochemical proxies. From 26.1 to 17.5 cal ka BP a few macrophyte remains and high numbers of Potamogetonaceae sequences were recovered: lake level was probably low, as suggested by other studies on the lake. Another phase of increased numbers of Chara sequences and the absence of Stuckenia cf. pamirica leaf remains was found between 17.5 and 12.2 cal ka BP, which coincides with a lake-level transgression at Lake Karakul as indicated by paleo-shoreline investigations. Analyses of macrophyte remains reveal intermediate paleo-productivity from 6.9 cal ka BP and high paleo-productivity from 2.2 cal ka BP onwards. From comparisons with other studies, we suggest that lake-level changes are the main driver for the submerged vegetation composition and productivity at the coring site in Lake Karakul and underline our conclusions by depicting the present-day distribution of Stuckenia cf. pamirica and Chara within the lake.

  • Radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating of sediments from Lake Karakul, Tajikistan
    Quaternary Geochronology, 2017
    Co-Authors: Steffen Mischke, Zhongping Lai, Bernhard Aichner, Liv Heinecke, Zafar Mahmoudov, Marie L Kuessner, Ulrike Herzschuh
    Abstract:

    Lake Karakul in the eastern Pamirs is a large and closed-basin lake in a partly glaciated catchment. Two parallel sediment cores were collected from 12 m water depth. The cores were correlated using XRF analysis and dated using radiocarbon and OSL techniques. The age results of the two dating methods are generally in agreement. The correlated composite core of 12.26 m length represents continuous accumulation of sediments in the lake basin since 31 ka. The lake reservoir effect (LRE) remained relatively constant over this period. High sediment accumulation rates (SedARs) were recorded before 23 ka and after 6.5 ka. The relatively close position of the coring location near the eastern shore of the lake implies that high SedARs resulted from low lake levels. Thus, high SedARs and lower lake levels before 23 ka probably reflect cold and dry climate conditions that inhibited the arrival of moist air at high elevation in the eastern Pamirs. Low lake levels after 6.5 ka were probably caused by declining temperatures after the warmer early Holocene, which had caused a reduction in water resources stored as snow, ice and frozen ground in the catchment. Low SedARs during 23–6.5 ka suggest increased lake levels in Lake Karakul. A short-lived increase of SedARs at 15 ka probably corresponds to the rapid melting of glaciers in the Karakul catchment during the Greenland Interstadial 1e, shortly after glaciers in the catchment had reached their maximum extents. The sediment cores from Lake Karakul represent an important climate archive with robust chronology for the last glacial–interglacial cycle from Central Asia.

R Walker - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Satellite imaging of the 2015 M7.2 earthquake in the Central Pamir, Tajikistan, elucidates a sequence of shallow strike-slip ruptures of the Sarez-Karakul fault
    Geophysical Journal International, 2020
    Co-Authors: A Elliott, J Elliott, J Hollingsworth, G Kulikova, B Parsons, R Walker
    Abstract:

    On 7 December 2015, a shallow Mw 7.2 strike-slip earthquake struck the Murghab River Valley in the Central Pamirs of Tajikistan. Seismologically this event was similar to a large seismic event in 1911 whose causative fault has never been identified. We measure the displacement field of the 2015 event from satellite observations using Sentinel-1 radar interferometry, Landsat-8 optical pixel-tracking, and surface rupture mapping from high resolution SPOT-6/7 imagery to characterize the role this earthquake rupture plays in the accommodation of strain on its causative structure, the Sarez-Karakul fault. We present geomorphic mapping and interpretations of other Quaternary-active reaches of this fault system, which highlight variable rupture history of the different sections. These sections appear to be separated by inherited bedrock structural boundaries. Significantly, the reaches of the fault northeast and southwest of the 2015 rupture exhibit the freshest morphology prior to 2015, indicative of a more recent rupture than elsewhere. Using new high resolution imagery we map fresh scarps at the northern and southern ends of the Sarez-Karakul fault which may represent this 1911 rupture. To test which of these reaches could have been the source of the elusive 1911 event, we compare synthetic seismograms from three plausible fault sources determined from geomorphology, with observed seismic traces from 1911 at early recording stations throughout Europe. We find that the best fitting fault source is in fact southwest of the 2015 rupture, meaning that we have a record of three distinct recent events on the Sarez-Karakul fault system—two of them instrumentally recorded. Our mapping of these separate events reveals a correlation between their boundaries and the active and inherited thrust and suture systems that intersect the northeast striking left-lateral fault, suggesting structural control over the extents of individual ruptures on the active strike-slip fault.

Steffen Mischke - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Aquatic macrophyte dynamics in Lake Karakul (Eastern Pamir) over the last 29 cal ka revealed by sedimentary ancient DNA and geochemical analyses of macrofossil remains
    Journal of Paleolimnology, 2017
    Co-Authors: Liv Heinecke, Steffen Mischke, Laura S. Epp, Maria Reschke, Kathleen R. Stoof-leichsenring, Birgit Plessen, Ulrike Herzschuh
    Abstract:

    Due to methodological challenges there are only a few studies that focus on macrophyte dynamics in large lakes despite their notable role in a lake’s ecosystem functioning. This study investigates composition and productivity changes of the submerged vegetation of Lake Karakul, Pamir Mountains (Tajikistan), using sedimentary ancient DNA metabarcoding and elemental (C/N) and isotopic (δ13C, δ15N) measurements of Stuckenia cf. pamirica (Baagoe) Z. Kaplan (Potamogetonaceae) leaf remains. No Stuckenia cf. pamirica leaf remains were found for 28.7–26.1 cal ka BP, when both Potamogetonaceae and Chara (L.) DNA sequences were recorded, suggesting sparse submerged vegetation at the coring site. This agrees with the inference of a deep lake reached using geochemical proxies. From 26.1 to 17.5 cal ka BP a few macrophyte remains and high numbers of Potamogetonaceae sequences were recovered: lake level was probably low, as suggested by other studies on the lake. Another phase of increased numbers of Chara sequences and the absence of Stuckenia cf. pamirica leaf remains was found between 17.5 and 12.2 cal ka BP, which coincides with a lake-level transgression at Lake Karakul as indicated by paleo-shoreline investigations. Analyses of macrophyte remains reveal intermediate paleo-productivity from 6.9 cal ka BP and high paleo-productivity from 2.2 cal ka BP onwards. From comparisons with other studies, we suggest that lake-level changes are the main driver for the submerged vegetation composition and productivity at the coring site in Lake Karakul and underline our conclusions by depicting the present-day distribution of Stuckenia cf. pamirica and Chara within the lake.

  • Radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating of sediments from Lake Karakul, Tajikistan
    Quaternary Geochronology, 2017
    Co-Authors: Steffen Mischke, Zhongping Lai, Bernhard Aichner, Liv Heinecke, Zafar Mahmoudov, Marie L Kuessner, Ulrike Herzschuh
    Abstract:

    Lake Karakul in the eastern Pamirs is a large and closed-basin lake in a partly glaciated catchment. Two parallel sediment cores were collected from 12 m water depth. The cores were correlated using XRF analysis and dated using radiocarbon and OSL techniques. The age results of the two dating methods are generally in agreement. The correlated composite core of 12.26 m length represents continuous accumulation of sediments in the lake basin since 31 ka. The lake reservoir effect (LRE) remained relatively constant over this period. High sediment accumulation rates (SedARs) were recorded before 23 ka and after 6.5 ka. The relatively close position of the coring location near the eastern shore of the lake implies that high SedARs resulted from low lake levels. Thus, high SedARs and lower lake levels before 23 ka probably reflect cold and dry climate conditions that inhibited the arrival of moist air at high elevation in the eastern Pamirs. Low lake levels after 6.5 ka were probably caused by declining temperatures after the warmer early Holocene, which had caused a reduction in water resources stored as snow, ice and frozen ground in the catchment. Low SedARs during 23–6.5 ka suggest increased lake levels in Lake Karakul. A short-lived increase of SedARs at 15 ka probably corresponds to the rapid melting of glaciers in the Karakul catchment during the Greenland Interstadial 1e, shortly after glaciers in the catchment had reached their maximum extents. The sediment cores from Lake Karakul represent an important climate archive with robust chronology for the last glacial–interglacial cycle from Central Asia.

Robrecht Declercq - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

Hermanus B. Groenewald - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Neuropeptides in the myenteric ganglia and nerve fibres of the forestomach and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs.
    The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research, 1994
    Co-Authors: Hermanus B. Groenewald
    Abstract:

    Previous studies indicated large, thin-walled, milk-filled rumens in lethal grey and white Karakul lambs. There was also a significant decrease in the number and size of the myenteric plexuses and the number of ganglion cells in these lambs. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the myenteric ganglia of the affected lambs are functional, by testing for the presence of vaso-active intestinal peptide, somatostatin, neurotensin, neuropeptide Y, met-enkephalin, calcitonin gene-related peptide and substance P in the myenteric ganglia and nerve fibres in the forestomach and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs. Four 1-cm2 samples were taken from analogous areas of the wall of the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum of five grey, five white and five black newborn Karakul lambs. They were pinned to wax squares, fixed for 18 h in Zamboni's fixative, dehydrated and rehydrated through graded alcohols and stored in phosphate-buffered saline. The outer longitudinal muscle layer of each sample of the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum was separated from the rest of the tissue layers, stained for each of the seven neuropeptides by employment of the immunofluorescence technique, and studied with a Leitz Orthoplan fluorescent microscope. All the material studied tested positive for all the neuropeptides. It is concluded that all the peptides tested for were present in all the lambs and that the myenteric ganglia are therefore functional in the lethal lambs.

  • Ultrastructure of the myenteric ganglia in the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs
    The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research, 1993
    Co-Authors: Hermanus B. Groenewald
    Abstract:

    GROENEWALD, H.B. 1993. Ultrastructure of the myenteric ganglia in the rumen, reticulum , omasum and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs. Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research , 60: 189- 195 Homozygous grey and white Karakul lambs die after they have reached weaning age. This is due to a lethal gene causing digestive disturbances. Previous studies revealed that grey and white lambs have large, milk-filled rumens; the phenomenon was attributed to a significant decrease in the number of myen­ teric ganglia and neurons in the rumen wall. This study was undertaken to determine whether any mor­ phological differences exist in the ultrastructure of the myenteric ganglia in the forestomach and aboma­ sum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs. Samples of the forestomach and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs were prepared routinely for electron microscopy and studied with a Phillips elec­ tron microscope. No morphological differences could be detected in the structure of the components of the myenteric ganglia in the forestomachs and abomasums of grey, white and black Karakul lambs. It was therefore concluded that the lethal gene in grey and white Karakul lambs results in a paucity of the myen­ teric ganglia, but does not affect the ultrastructure of these structures.

  • Ultrastructure of the epithelium of the rumen, reticulum and omasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs
    The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research, 1993
    Co-Authors: Hermanus B. Groenewald
    Abstract:

    GROENEWALD, H. B. 1993. Ultrastructure of the epithelium of the rumen, reticulum and omasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs. Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research, 60:197- 204 Mortalities due to digestive disturbances occur in homozygous grey and white lambs after they have reached weaning age. Milk-filled, distended rumens, due to malfunctioning of the oesophageal groove, are found 24 h after birth. Scanning electron microscopical studies revealed that milk caused sloughing of the luminal cells in the forestomachs of the affected lambs, while no sloughing of cells was apparent in control black lambs. The purpose of this study was to compare the ultrastructure of the forestomach mucosa of grey, white and black Karakul lambs; to determine whether the sloughing of luminal cells was evident in sections; and, if possible, to find a reason for the desquamation of the cells. Samples of the forestomach of grey, white and black Karakul lambs were prepared routinely for electron microscopy and studied with a Phillips electron microscope. In all the lambs the mucosa of the forestomach was a stratified squamous epithelium consisting of a stratum basale, stratum spinosum and stratum corneum. In the grey and white lambs the luminal cells of the stratum corneum were electron dense, non-nucleated and vacuolated. Sloughing of luminal cells was observed. In the black lambs no sloughing of cells was evident and the luminal cells were moderately electron-dense, nucleated elements. Desquamation of the luminal cells in the affected lambs revealed the underlying layer with its exposed desmosomal attachment sites. This explained the differences in the appearance of the luminal cells in the three groups of lambs as revealed by the scanning electron microscope.

  • A comparative study of the thickness of the tunica muscularis in the forestomach and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs.
    The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research, 1992
    Co-Authors: Hermanus B. Groenewald, Kenneth Kurt Booth
    Abstract:

    Homozygous grey Karakul lambs are born with a lethal genetic factor responsible for death and weaning age. When put on a high roughage diet under field conditions they develop distended, thin-walled rumens and sand impacted abomasa. Homozygous white Karakul lambs have a similar factor but survive for a longer period. Black Karakul lambs are not affected. The present study was undertaken to compare by image analysis the thickness of the tunica muscularis of the forestomach and abomasum of 24-hour old grey, white and black Karakul lambs. One square centimetre samples were taken from equivalent areas in each case of the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum of 38 embalmed Karakul lambs. Haematoxylin and eosin stained histological sections of each sample were studied with a Vids 2 Image Analyzer and the thickness of the circular and longitudinal muscle layers was measured. An analysis of variance indicated a significant difference between the groups in the thickness of the tunica muscularis of the rumen, reticulum and abomasum; the grey group displaying the thinnest and the black group the thickest. The omasa were not affected. The study indicates a reduction in thickness of the tunica muscularis of the homozygous grey and white lambs when compared to normal black lambs.

  • A comparative histological study of the number and size of the myenteric ganglia and neurones in the fore-stomach and abomasum of grey, white and black Karakul lambs
    The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research, 1992
    Co-Authors: Hermanus B. Groenewald, Kenneth Kurt Booth
    Abstract:

    Homozygous grey Karakul lambs are born with a lethal genetic factor responsible for death at weaning age. When put on a high roughage diet under field conditions they develop distended, thin-walled rumens and sand impacted abomasa. Homozygous white Karakul lambs have a similar factor but survive for a longer period. Black Karakul lambs are not affected. The present study was undertaken to compare by image analysis the number and size of the myenteric ganglia, and the number of myenteric neurones in the walls of the fore-stomach and abomasum of 24-h-old grey, white and black Karakul lambs. One square centimetre samples were taken from analogous areas of the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum of 38 embalmed Karakul lambs. Haematoxylin and eosin stained histological sections of each sample were studied with a Vids 2 Image Analyzer. One way analysis of variance indicated a significant difference between the groups regarding the number and size of the myenteric ganglia and in the number of myenteric neurones in the reticulum, rumen and abomasum. The number and size of the ganglia and the number of neurones was greatest in the black lambs and decreased progressively in the white and grey lambs. The omasum was not affected. It is suggested that the paucity of myenteric ganglia and neurones in the regions examined is instrumental in causing the lethal condition described above.