Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 13;8(11):e79317. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079317. eCollection 2013.
Widespread deforestation, agriculture, and construction of milldams by European settlers greatly influenced valley-bottom stream morphology and riparian vegetation in the northeastern USA. The former broad, tussock-sedge wetlands with small, anastomosing channels were converted into today's incised, meandering streams with unstable banks that support mostly weedy, invasive vegetation. Vast accumulations of fine-grained "legacy" sediments that blanket the regional valley-bottom Piedmont landscape now are being reworked from stream banks, significantly impairing the ecological health of downstream water bodies, most notably the Chesapeake Bay. However, potential restoration is impaired by lack of direct knowledge of the pre-settlement riparian and upslope floral ecosystems. We studied the subfossil leaf flora of Denlingers Mill, an obsolete (breached) milldam site in southeastern Pennsylvania that exhibits a modern secondary forest growing atop thin soils, above bedrock outcrops immediately adjacent to a modified, incised stream channel. Presumably, an overhanging old-growth forest also existed on this substrate until the early 1700s and was responsible for depositing exceptionally preserved, minimally transported subfossil leaves into hydric soil strata, which immediately underlie post-European settlement legacy sediments. We interpret the eleven identified species of the subfossil assemblage to primarily represent a previously unknown, upland Red Oak-American Beech mixed hardwood forest. Some elements also appear to belong to a valley-margin Red Maple-Black Ash swamp forest, consistent with preliminary data from a nearby site. Thus, our results add significantly to a more complete understanding of the pre-European settlement landscape, especially of the hardwood tree flora. Compared with the modern forest, it is apparent that both lowland and upslope forests in the region have been modified significantly by historical activities. Our study underscores that generally overlooked subfossil leaves can provide important, local, temporally constrained paleoecological data, with much potential value in this case for stream and wetland restoration decisions in the mid-Atlantic region.
欧洲移民的大规模森林砍伐、农业和修建磨坊水坝极大地影响了美国东北部山谷底部溪流的形态和河岸植被。以前宽阔的、长满蓑草的湿地有小的、交织的河道,现在变成了今天的深切、蜿蜒的溪流,河岸不稳定,主要生长着杂草、入侵性植被。覆盖该地区山谷底部皮埃蒙特景观的大量细粒“遗留”沉积物现在正在从河岸重新搬运,这极大地损害了下游水体的生态健康,尤其是切萨皮克湾。然而,潜在的恢复受到缺乏对定居前河岸和上游花卉生态系统的直接了解的影响。我们研究了宾夕法尼亚州东南部废弃的(决口的)德林格米尔磨坊遗址的亚化石叶植物群,该遗址是一个废弃的磨坊水坝遗址,展示了一个现代次生林,生长在薄薄的土壤上,位于紧邻一个经过改造的、深切的溪流河道的基岩露头之上。据推测,在这个基质上也曾经有一个悬垂的古老森林,直到 18 世纪早期,它负责将异常保存的、运输量最小的亚化石叶沉积到水生生境土壤层中,这些土壤层直接位于欧洲人定居后的遗留沉积物之下。我们将亚化石组合中的十一种已鉴定的物种解释为主要代表以前未知的、高地栎树-山毛榉混合硬木林。一些元素似乎也属于河谷边缘的红枫-黑桤木沼泽林,这与附近一个地点的初步数据一致。因此,我们的结果极大地增加了对欧洲人定居前景观的更全面理解,特别是对硬木树种的理解。与现代森林相比,该地区的低地和上游森林显然都受到了历史活动的显著影响。我们的研究强调,通常被忽视的亚化石叶可以提供重要的、局部的、时间约束的古生态数据,在这种情况下,对于大西洋中部地区的溪流和湿地恢复决策具有很大的潜在价值。