Bush M B, Silman M R, McMichael C, Saatchi S
Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Institute of Technology, 150 West University Boulevard, Melbourne, FL 32901, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2008 May 27;363(1498):1795-02. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2007.0014.
Fire is an important and arguably unnatural component of many wet Amazonian and Andean forest systems. Soil charcoal has been used to infer widespread human use of landscapes prior to European Conquest. An analysis of Amazonian soil carbon records reveals that the records have distinct spatial and temporal patterns, suggesting that either fires were only set in moderately seasonal areas of Amazonia or that strongly seasonal and aseasonal areas are undersampled. Synthesizing data from 300 charcoal records, an age-frequency diagram reveals peaks of fire apparently coinciding with some periods of very strong El Niño activity. However, the El Niño record does not always provide an accurate prediction of fire timing, and a better match is found in the record of insolation minima. After the time of European contact, fires became much scarcer within Amazonia. In both the Amazonia and the Andes, modern fire pattern is strongly allied to human activity. On the flank of the Andes, forests that have never burned are being eroded by fire spreading downslope from grasslands. Species of these same forests are being forced to migrate upslope due to warming and will encounter a firm artificial fire boundary of human activity.
火灾是许多湿润的亚马逊和安第斯森林系统中一个重要且可以说是非自然的组成部分。土壤木炭已被用于推断欧洲征服之前人类对景观的广泛利用情况。对亚马逊土壤碳记录的分析表明,这些记录具有明显的空间和时间模式,这表明要么火灾仅发生在亚马逊地区季节性适中的区域,要么强烈季节性和非季节性区域的采样不足。综合300个木炭记录的数据,一个年龄频率图显示火灾高峰显然与一些非常强烈的厄尔尼诺活动时期相吻合。然而,厄尔尼诺记录并不总是能准确预测火灾时间,在日照最小值记录中发现了更好的匹配。欧洲接触之后,亚马逊地区的火灾变得更加稀少。在亚马逊地区和安第斯山脉,现代火灾模式都与人类活动密切相关。在安第斯山脉的山坡上,从未发生过火灾的森林正被从草原向下蔓延的火灾侵蚀。由于气候变暖,这些森林中的物种被迫向上坡迁移,并且将遇到人类活动形成的牢固的人工火灾边界。