User talk:Jamilabaig/sandbox

I want to contribute to the article that I used for my first assignment “Critiques an article. I will contribute to this article by adding the “macroinvertebrates as biological indicators of the lake and impact of climate change on them”. Most focus will be on the use of chironomid as a climate proxy of the lakes.

Following are some of the articles that I am going to use for this addition in the Paleolimnology article.

1.	Andrea, L., Tartari, G. A., Musazzi, S., Guilizzoni, P., Marchetto, A., Manca, M., … Callieri, C. (2007). 21 High altitude lakes: limnology and paleolimnology. In Developments in Earth Surface Processes (Vol. 10, pp. 155–170). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0928-2025(06)10021-8 2. 	Beniston, M., Diaz, H. F., & Bradley, R. S. (1997). Climatic change at high elevation sites: an overview. Climatic Change, 36, 233–251. https://doi.org/10.3406/rga.2005.2342 3.	Ghimire, N. P., Jha, P. K., & Caravello, G. (2013). Water Quality of High-Altitude Lakes in the Sagarmatha (Everest) National Park, Nepal, 2013(July), 22–28. https://doi.org/10.4236/jep.2013.47A003 4.	Guilizzoni, P., Lami, A., Manca, M., Musazzi, S., & Marchetto, A. (2006). Palaeoenvironmental Changes Inferred from Biological Remains in Short Lake Sediment Cores from the Central Alps and Dolomites. Hydrobiologia, 562(1), 167–191. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-005-1810-0 5.	Kangur, M., Kangur, K., Laugaste, R., Punning, J. M., & Möls, T. (2007). Combining limnological and paleolimnological approaches in assessing degradation of Lake Pskov. Hydrobiologia, 584(1), 121–132. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-007-0597-6 6.	Lami, A., Guilizzoni, P., Marchetto, A., Bettinetti, R., & Smith, D. J. (1998). Palaeolimnological evidence of environmental changes in some high altitude Himalayan lakes(Nepal). Memorie dell’Istituto Italiano Di Idrobiologia, Special Volume, 57(January), 130–131. 7.	De Mendoza, Guillermo, and Jordi Catalan. "Lake macroinvertebrates and the altitudinal environmental gradient in the Pyrenees." Hydrobiologia 648.1 (2010): 51-72. 8.	Lacoul, P., & Freedman, B. (2005). Physical and chemical limnology of 34 lentic waterbodies along a tropical-to-alpine altitudinal gradient in Nepal. International Review of Hydrobiology, 90(3), 254–276. https://doi.org/10.1002/iroh.200410766 9.	Sharma, C. M., Sharma, S., Gurung, S., Bajracharya, R. M., Jüttner, I., & Pradhan, N. S. (2009). Global Climatic Change and High Altitude Lakes: Impacts on Aquatic Biodiversity and Pollution Status. Natural Resources Management: Reviews and Research in the Himalayan Watersheds, 44(977), 103–122. 10.	Singh, S. P., Bassignana-Khadka, I., Karky, B. S., & Sharma, E. (2011). Climate Change in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas. Icimod, 1–102. Retrieved from papers3://publication/uuid/590D387B-F8F9-4DE0-A051-59C875459C2AJamilabaig (talk) 01:03, 5 May 2017 (UTC)

It is good that you are working as a team with Sylerb to work on the article. You guys made detailed plans for editing by dividing tasks per each person, the topic by topic editions. Adding more of why the long-term records from freshwater sphere is important and distinct from other sphere records, for studying overall long-term environmental changes, would be good :) Hyunsoo Lee (talk) 02:20, 14 May 2017 (UTC)
 * Peer review from Hyunsoo Lee (Long-term envi class)

comments
Here are comments I gave Syler. You can feel free to add sections of the article with no content, in order to indicate that a complete article should have sections on diatom analysis, for example, in addition to the sections you add on chironomid analysis.

This article could use a lot of expansion and is a good choice for your course work. However, your part (Syler) on modern lake chemical and physical environments is better suited for the article Limnology, not this article. I would not have these sections in the article, but rather briefly summarize the important aspects of the limnic environment (temperature and oxygen profiles, chemoclines and nutrients, etc.  Note there are sections in the article 'Trophic State index" that discuss nutrient regimes in lakes.  So be sure to include wikilinks out to those article sections.

There is a five-volume set that gives a broad overview of paleoenvironmental research from lake sediments. Some sections in those books deal specifically with reconstructing the lake environment. Diatom analysis is a key method in paleolimnology, and there is only a short description of it (on Phanerozoic time scales) in the Diatom article.

Be sure to copy in your edits into the main article little bits at a time, keeping track of your changes using the Summary box.Answer.to.the.rock (talk) 12:56, 25 May 2017 (UTC)