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Contemporary Problems of Ecology

2024 year, number 2

Stanols in the sediments of Lake Shira (southern Siberia) as an indicator of fecal influx into the lake in the late Holocene

E. K. SINNER1, A. N. BOYANDIN2, D. Yu. ROGOZIN2
1Siberian Federal University, Krasnoyarsk, Russia
2Krasnoyarsk Science Centre of the Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Science, Institute of Biophysics Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Krasnoyarsk, Russia
Keywords: fecal stanols, lake sediments, anthropogenic load, Lake Shira, Khakassia, Holocene

Abstract

The study of fecal compounds in lake sediments is one of the newest trends in paleo-limnology. Some stanols are produced by the intestinal microflora of animals from sterols found in food. Once in water bodies, these substances remain in bottom sediments for millennia, therefore they are biochemical indicators of fecal intake. In humans and animals, similar 5β-stanols are synthesized, but their percentages differ. The human intestinal microflora produces more coprostanol and epicoprostanol compared to other animals, so these 5β-stanols are used to reconstruct the history of the population of water bodies, as well as to assess the anthropogenic load. In the present work, using gas chromatography with mass spectrometric detection, the vertical distribution of fecal stanols and their precursor cholesterol in dated bottom sediments of Lake Shira (southern Siberia, Republic of Khakassia) for a period of about 2000 years was studied for the first time. It is shown that the relative share of coprostanol and epicoprostanol was higher in sediments corresponding to the periods when the anthropogenic load in the lake′s drainage basin was supposedly increased: during the heyday of the medieval state of the Yenisei Kyrgyz (9-11 centuries AD), during the period of mass colonization by the Russian population (17-18 centuries), as well as in the 19-20 centuries during the development of resort activities. The absolute content of all fecal stanols during the last hundred years is higher, which can be explained both by an increase in fecal inflows and by degradation of stanols, leading to a decrease in the content of fecal stanols in the underlying core layers. The results obtained can be useful for monitoring the efficiency of treatment facilities, as well as for identifying the historical dynamics of human presence in the lake′s catchment area.