Department of Earth Sciences, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010 Dec 14;107(50):21343-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1011801107. Epub 2010 Dec 13.
Humans have altered natural patterns of fire for millennia, but the impact of human-set fires is thought to have been slight in wet closed-canopy forests. In the South Island of New Zealand, Polynesians (Māori), who arrived 700-800 calibrated years (cal y) ago, and then Europeans, who settled ∼150 cal y ago, used fire as a tool for forest clearance, but the structure and environmental consequences of these fires are poorly understood. High-resolution charcoal and pollen records from 16 lakes were analyzed to reconstruct the fire and vegetation history of the last 1,000 y. Diatom, chironomid, and element concentration data were examined to identify disturbance-related limnobiotic and biogeochemical changes within burned watersheds. At most sites, several high-severity fire events occurred within the first two centuries of Māori arrival and were often accompanied by a transformation in vegetation, slope stability, and lake chemistry. Proxies of past climate suggest that human activity alone, rather than unusually dry or warm conditions, was responsible for this increased fire activity. The transformation of scrub to grassland by Europeans in the mid-19th century triggered further, sometimes severe, watershed change, through additional fires, erosion, and the introduction of nonnative plant species. Alteration of natural disturbance regimes had lasting impacts, primarily because native forests had little or no previous history of fire and little resilience to the severity of burning. Anthropogenic burning in New Zealand highlights the vulnerability of closed-canopy forests to novel disturbance regimes and suggests that similar settings may be less resilient to climate-induced changes in the future.
人类已经改变了自然火的模式数千年,但人类引发的火灾对潮湿的封闭树冠森林的影响被认为是轻微的。在新西兰南岛,700-800 年前到达的波利尼西亚人(毛利人)和 150 年前定居的欧洲人曾将火用作森林清理的工具,但这些火灾的结构和环境后果知之甚少。16 个湖泊的高分辨率木炭和花粉记录被分析,以重建过去 1000 年的火灾和植被历史。对硅藻、摇蚊和元素浓度数据进行了检查,以确定受干扰的内陆水生生物和生物地球化学变化。在大多数地点,在毛利人到达后的头两个世纪内发生了几次高强度火灾事件,这些火灾通常伴随着植被、边坡稳定性和湖水化学性质的转变。过去气候的代表表明,增加的火灾活动是由人类活动引起的,而不是异常干燥或温暖的条件。欧洲人在 19 世纪中叶将灌木丛转变为草原,通过额外的火灾、侵蚀和引入非本地植物物种,进一步引发了有时严重的流域变化。自然干扰制度的改变产生了持久的影响,主要是因为原生林以前很少或没有火灾历史,对燃烧的严重程度几乎没有恢复能力。新西兰的人为燃烧突出了封闭树冠森林对新型干扰制度的脆弱性,并表明类似的环境在未来可能对气候引起的变化更没有恢复力。