Litcius/Paper detail

Harmful algal blooms and cyanotoxins in Lake Amatitlán, Guatemala, coincided with ancient Maya occupation in the watershed

Matthew N. Waters, Mark Brenner, Jason H. Curtis, Claudia S. Romero-Oliva, Margaret Dix, Manuel Pérez Cano

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Our paleolimnological data show that harmful cyanobacteria blooms and cyanotoxin production occurred during periods of ancient Maya occupation. Highest prehistoric concentrations of cyanotoxins in the sediment coincided with alterations of the water system in the Maya city of Kaminaljuyú, and changes in nutrient stoichiometry and maximum cyanobacteria abundance were coeval with times of greatest ancient human populations in the watershed. These prehistoric episodes of cyanobacteria proliferation and cyanotoxin production rivaled modern conditions in the lake, with respect to both bloom magnitude and toxicity. This suggests that pre-Columbian Maya occupation of the Lake Amatitlán watershed negatively impacted water potability. Prehistoric cultural eutrophication indicates that human-driven nutrient enrichment of water bodies is not an exclusively modern phenomenon and may well have been a stressor for the ancient Maya.

Topics & Concepts

CyanotoxinAlgal bloomPrehistoryMayaWatershedEcologyAlgaeGeographyMicrocystinCyanobacteriaArchaeologyBiologyPhytoplanktonComputer scienceNutrientBacteriaMachine learningGeneticsAquatic Ecosystems and Phytoplankton DynamicsGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchGroundwater and Isotope Geochemistry