Witteveen Nina H, White Cheryl, Sanchez Martinez Barbara A, Booij Roemer, Philip Annemarie, Gosling William D, Bush Mark B, McMichael Crystal N H
Department of Ecosystem and Landscape Dynamics, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Science Park 904, 1098 GE Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Department of History, Faculty of Humanities, Anton de Kom University, Universiteitscomplex, Gebouw 7, Leysweg 86, Paramaribo, Suriname.
Veg Hist Archaeobot. 2024;33(2):221-236. doi: 10.1007/s00334-023-00932-2. Epub 2023 Jun 27.
Phytoliths preserved in soils and sediments can be used to provide unique insights into past vegetation dynamics in response to human and climate change. Phytoliths can reconstruct local vegetation in terrestrial soils where pollen grains typically decay, providing a range of markers (or lack thereof) that document past human activities. The ca. 6 million km of Amazonian forests have relatively few baseline datasets documenting changes in phytolith representation across gradients of human disturbances. Here we show that phytolith assemblages vary on local scales across a gradient of (modern) human disturbance in tropical rainforests of Suriname. Detrended correspondence analysis showed that the phytolith assemblages found in managed landscapes (shifting cultivation and a garden), unmanaged forests, and abandoned reforesting sites were clearly distinguishable from intact forests and from each other. Our results highlight the sensitivity and potential of phytoliths to be used in reconstructing successional trajectories after site usage and abandonment. Percentages of specific phytolith morphotypes were also positively correlated with local palm abundances derived from UAV data, and with biomass estimated from MODIS satellite imagery. This baseline dataset provides an index of likely changes that can be observed at other sites that indicate past human activities and long-term forest recovery in Amazonia.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00334-023-00932-2.
保存在土壤和沉积物中的植硅体可用于提供独特的见解,以了解过去植被动态对人类和气候变化的响应。在花粉粒通常会腐烂的陆地土壤中,植硅体可以重建当地植被,提供一系列记录过去人类活动的标记(或缺乏标记的情况)。约600万平方公里的亚马逊森林中,记录植硅体在人类干扰梯度上变化的基线数据集相对较少。在这里,我们表明,在苏里南热带雨林中,植硅体组合在(现代)人类干扰梯度上的局部尺度上存在差异。去趋势对应分析表明,在管理景观(轮垦和花园)、未管理森林和废弃再造林地中发现的植硅体组合与完整森林以及彼此之间都有明显区别。我们的结果突出了植硅体在重建场地使用和废弃后的演替轨迹方面的敏感性和潜力。特定植硅体形态类型的百分比也与从无人机数据得出的当地棕榈丰度以及从MODIS卫星图像估算的生物量呈正相关。这个基线数据集提供了一个可能变化的指标,可在其他表明亚马逊地区过去人类活动和长期森林恢复的地点观察到。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s00334-023-00932-2获取的补充材料。