Cannon Charles H, Morley Robert J, Bush Andrew B G
Key Lab of Tropical Forest Ecology, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanic Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yunnan 666303, People's Republic of China.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Jul 7;106(27):11188-93. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0809865106. Epub 2009 Jun 19.
Understanding the historical dynamics of forest communities is a critical element for accurate prediction of their response to future change. Here, we examine evergreen rainforest distribution in the Sunda Shelf region at the last glacial maximum (LGM), using a spatially explicit model incorporating geographic, paleoclimatic, and geologic evidence. Results indicate that at the LGM, Sundaland rainforests covered a substantially larger area than currently present. Extrapolation of the model over the past million years demonstrates that the current "island archipelago" setting in Sundaland is extremely unusual given the majority of its history and the dramatic biogeographic transitions caused by global deglaciation were rapid and brief. Compared with dominant glacial conditions, lowland forests were probably reduced from approximately 1.3 to 0.8 x 10(6) km(2) while upland forests were probably reduced by half, from approximately 2.0 to 1.0 x 10(5) km(2). Coastal mangrove and swamp forests experienced the most dramatic change during deglaciations, going through a complete and major biogeographic relocation. The Sundaland forest dynamics of fragmentation and contraction and subsequent expansion, driven by glacial cycles, occur in the opposite phase as those in the northern hemisphere and equatorial Africa, indicating that Sundaland evergreen rainforest communities are currently in a refugial stage. Widespread human-mediated reduction and conversion of these forests in their refugial stage, when most species are passing through significant population bottlenecks, strongly emphasizes the urgency of conservation and management efforts. Further research into the natural process of fragmentation and contraction during deglaciation is necessary to understand the long-term effect of human activity on forest species.
了解森林群落的历史动态是准确预测其对未来变化响应的关键要素。在此,我们利用一个纳入地理、古气候和地质证据的空间明确模型,研究末次盛冰期(LGM)巽他陆架地区的常绿雨林分布。结果表明,在末次盛冰期,巽他大陆的雨林覆盖面积比目前大得多。对该模型在过去一百万年的推断表明,鉴于巽他大陆的大部分历史,其当前的“岛屿群岛”格局极为罕见,且全球冰消作用导致的剧烈生物地理转变迅速而短暂。与主要的冰川条件相比,低地森林面积可能从约130万平方千米减少至80万平方千米,而高地森林面积可能减少一半,从约20万平方千米减至10万平方千米。沿海红树林和沼泽森林在冰消期经历了最显著的变化,经历了一次完整且重大的生物地理迁移。由冰川周期驱动的巽他大陆森林破碎化、收缩及随后扩张的动态过程,与北半球和赤道非洲的情况相反,这表明巽他大陆的常绿雨林群落目前处于避难阶段。在这个避难阶段,当大多数物种正经历重大种群瓶颈时,人类对这些森林的广泛减少和改造,强烈凸显了保护和管理工作的紧迫性。有必要进一步研究冰消期破碎化和收缩的自然过程,以了解人类活动对森林物种的长期影响。