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<italic>Polylepis</italic> woodland dynamics during the last 20,000 years.

Authors :
Valencia, Bryan G.
Bush, Mark B.
Coe, Angela L.
Orren, Elizabeth
Gosling, William D.
Source :
Journal of Biogeography. May2018, Vol. 45 Issue 5, p1019-1030. 12p. 2 Charts, 3 Graphs, 1 Map.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Abstract: Aim: To determine the palaeoecological influences of climate change and human land use on the spatial distribution patterns of &lt;italic&gt;Polylepis&lt;/italic&gt; woodlands in the Andes. Location: Tropical Andes above 2,900&#160;m between 2&#176;S and 18&#176;S of latitude. Methods: Pollen and charcoal data were gathered from 13 Andean lake sediment records and were rescaled by the maximum value in each site. The rescaled pollen data were used to estimate a mean abundance and coefficient of variation to show woodland expansions/contractions and woodland fragmentation over the last 20,000&#160;years. The rescaled charcoal was displayed as a 200‐year moving median using 500‐year bins to infer the influence of fire on woodland dynamics at landscape scale. Pollen and charcoal were compared with speleothem, clastic flux and archaeological data to assess the influence of moisture balance, glacial activity and human impact on the spatial distribution of &lt;italic&gt;Polylepis&lt;/italic&gt; woodlands. Results: Woodland expansion and fire were correlated with precipitation changes and glacier dynamics from &lt;italic&gt;c&lt;/italic&gt;.&#160;20 to 6&#160;kcal bp (thousands of calibrated years before present). Charcoal abundances between 20 and 12&#160;kcal bp were less common than from 12&#160;kcal bp to modern. However, human‐induced fires were unlikely to be the main cause of a woodland decline centred at 11&#160;kcal bp, as woodlands recovered from 10.5 to 9.5&#160;kcal bp (about twofold increase). Charcoal peaks analogous to those that induced the woodland decline at 11&#160;kcal bp were commonplace post‐9.5&#160;kcal bp but did not trigger an equivalent woodland contraction. An increase in the coefficient of variation after &lt;italic&gt;c&lt;/italic&gt;.&#160;5.5&#160;kcal bp suggests enhanced fragmentation and coincided with the shift from logistic to exponential growth of human populations. Over the last 1,000&#160;years, &lt;italic&gt;Polylepis&lt;/italic&gt; became hyper‐fragmented with over half of sites losing &lt;italic&gt;Polylepis&lt;/italic&gt; from the record and with coefficients of variation paralleling those of glacial times. Main conclusions: &lt;italic&gt;Polylepis&lt;/italic&gt; woodlands formed naturally patchy woodlands, rather than a continuous vegetation belt, prior to human occupation in the Andes. The main factors controlling pre‐human woodland dynamics were precipitation and landscape heterogeneity. Human activity led to hyper‐fragmentation during the last &lt;italic&gt;c&lt;/italic&gt;.&#160;1,000&#160;years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03050270
Volume :
45
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biogeography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
129427010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13209