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Late-Holocene changes in vegetation composition and fire regimes in the subalpine western Nanling Mountains in subtropic China.

Authors :
Quan, Mingying
Zhong, Wei
Wang, Xiaojun
Wang, Bingxiang
Li, Tianhang
Source :
Holocene; Jun2023, Vol. 33 Issue 6, p707-717, 11p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Understanding the responses of vegetation composition to climate, fire regimes and human disturbance is crucial to provide valuable insights to protect current and future ecosystems. However, relevant studies were poorly performed on the heavily forested montane areas in subtropic East Asia. In this study, we present pollen and charcoal records from a 95-cm long peat core in the subalpine Daping swamp in the western Nanling Mountains in subtropic China, to discuss the possible interactions among vegetation, fire, climatic change, and human activities in the late-Holocene. Our results suggest that the vegetation in the study area was composed of deciduous–evergreen mixed forests with few fire events during 3140–630 cal yr BP, and its changes were mainly controlled by climate with rare human impacts reflected by low concentrations of charcoals, low proportions of Poaceae pollen, and high AP/NAP ratios. After 630 cal yr BP, pollen data indicate an obvious shift from dense forests to more open landscape. The sharp increase of charcoal concentrations, the extremely low AP/NAP and increased Poaceae percentages suggest that this vegetation shift is not only impacted by the dry climate conditions, but also by the intensified deforestation due to enhanced human activities such as the slash-and-burn cultivation, etc. This study reveals a vital transitional timing from the natural to the superimposed anthropogenic forcing of vegetation composition and fire regimes at ~630 cal yr BP. Regional comparison of charcoal records indicates that the onset timing of intensified human disturbance in the inland montane areas is much later than that in the coastal areas in subtropic China. We infer the obstacle impacts of the montane terrain and the different responses of the dissemination of agriculture and enhanced population migration have played a crucial role in this asynchronous spreading pattern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09596836
Volume :
33
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Holocene
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163954929
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/09596836231157058