Iglesias Virginia, Whitlock Cathy
Department of Earth Sciences and Montana Institute on Ecosystems, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717
Department of Earth Sciences and Montana Institute on Ecosystems, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Dec 23;111(51):E5545-54. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1410443111. Epub 2014 Dec 8.
Forest/steppe boundaries are among the most dynamic ecosystems on Earth and are highly vulnerable to changes in climate and land use. In this study we examine the postglacial history of the Patagonian forest/steppe ecotone (41-43°S) to better understand its sensitivity to past variations in climate, disturbance, and human activity before European colonization. We present regional trends in vegetation and biomass burning, as detected by generalized additive models fitted to seven pollen and charcoal records, and compare the results with other paleoenvironmental data, as well as archeological and ecological information to (i) estimate postglacial fire trends at regional scales, (ii) assess the evolution of climate-vegetation-fire linkages over the last 18,000 calibrated (cal) years B.P., and (iii) evaluate the role of humans in altering pre-European landscapes and fire regimes. Pollen and charcoal data indicate that biomass burning was relatively low during warm/dry steppe-dominated landscapes in the late glacial/Early Holocene transition and increased as more humid conditions favored forest development after ca. 10,000 cal years B.P. Postglacial fire activity was thus limited by fuel availability associated with sparse vegetation cover rather than by suitable climate conditions. In contrast to extensive burning by European settlers, variations in indigenous population densities were not associated with fluctuations in regional or watershed-scale fire occurrence, suggesting that climate-vegetation-fire linkages in northern Patagonia evolved with minimal or very localized human influences before European settlement.
森林/草原边界是地球上最具活力的生态系统之一,极易受到气候和土地利用变化的影响。在本研究中,我们考察了巴塔哥尼亚森林/草原交错带(南纬41 - 43°)的冰后期历史,以便更好地了解其在欧洲殖民之前对过去气候、干扰和人类活动变化的敏感性。我们展示了通过拟合七个花粉和木炭记录的广义相加模型检测到的植被和生物质燃烧的区域趋势,并将结果与其他古环境数据以及考古和生态信息进行比较,以(i)估计区域尺度上的冰后期火灾趋势,(ii)评估过去18,000年校准(cal)年前气候 - 植被 - 火灾联系的演变,以及(iii)评估人类在改变欧洲殖民前景观和火灾格局中的作用。花粉和木炭数据表明,在末次冰期晚期/全新世早期过渡阶段以温暖/干燥草原为主的景观中,生物质燃烧相对较低,而在约公元前10,000 cal年后,随着更湿润的条件有利于森林发展,燃烧增加。因此,冰后期火灾活动受到与稀疏植被覆盖相关的燃料可用性限制,而非适宜的气候条件限制。与欧洲定居者的大规模燃烧形成对比的是,当地人口密度的变化与区域或流域尺度火灾发生的波动无关,这表明在欧洲定居之前,巴塔哥尼亚北部的气候 - 植被 - 火灾联系在最小或非常局部的人类影响下演变。