Grupo de Ecología y Restauración Forestal (FORECO), Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Alcalá, Alcalá de Henares, Spain; Institute of Plant Sciences, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland; Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Institute of Plant Sciences, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland; Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Nov 1;949:174986. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174986. Epub 2024 Jul 23.
The importance of understanding the long-lasting legacy of past land use on modern ecosystems has long been acknowledged. However, the magnitude and persistence of such legacies have been assessed only occasionally. Northern Greece has been a gateway of farming into mainland Europe during the Neolithic, thus providing a perfect setting to assess the potential impact of land-use history on present-day ecosystems. Additionally, the marked Holocene climatic variability of the southern Balkans makes it possible to investigate climate-vegetation-land use interactions over long timescales. Here, we have studied a sediment record from Limni Vegoritis (Northern Greece) spanning the past ∼9000 years using palaeoecological proxies (pollen, spores, stomata, microscopic charcoal). We aimed to reconstruct long-term vegetation dynamics in submediterranean Greece, to assess the environmental factors controlling them and to establish the legacies of the long history of land use in the modern landscape. We found that the Early Holocene afforestation, mainly oak woodlands, was delayed because of suboptimal moisture conditions. Later, colder and drier conditions during the rapid climate change centred around the '8.2 ka event' triggered woodland opening and the spread of wooded (Juniperus) steppe vegetation. First indicators of farming activities are recorded during this period, but their abundances are too low to explain the concurrent large deforestation episode. Later, pinewoods (probably dominated by Pinus nigra) with deciduous Quercus spread and dominated the landscape for several millennia. These forests experienced repeated multi-centennial setback-recovery episodes associated with land-use intensification, but pines eventually declined ∼2500-2000 years ago during Classical times under heavy land use comprising intense pastoralism. This was the starting point for the present-day landscape, where the main 'foundation' taxon of the ancient forests (Pinus cf. nigra) is missing, therefore attesting to the strong imprint that historical land use has left on the modern landscape.
长期以来,人们一直认识到了解过去土地利用对现代生态系统的持久影响的重要性。然而,这种影响的程度和持久性只是偶尔被评估。希腊北部在新石器时代是农业进入欧洲大陆的门户,因此提供了一个评估土地利用历史对当今生态系统潜在影响的绝佳环境。此外,巴尔干半岛南部明显的全新世气候变异性使得在长时间尺度上研究气候-植被-土地利用相互作用成为可能。在这里,我们使用古生态学指标(花粉、孢子、气孔、微观木炭)研究了来自希腊北部 Limni Vegoritis 的一段过去约 9000 年的沉积物记录。我们的目的是重建希腊亚热带地区的长期植被动态,评估控制这些动态的环境因素,并确定现代景观中悠久土地利用历史的影响。我们发现,由于水分条件不佳,早全新世的造林(主要是橡木林)被推迟。后来,“8.2 千年前事件”为中心的快速气候变化导致更寒冷和干燥的条件触发了林地开放和林地(杜松)草原植被的扩散。在此期间,首次记录了农业活动的迹象,但它们的丰度太低,无法解释同期大规模的森林砍伐事件。后来,松树林(可能由黑松主导)与落叶栎属一起扩散并主导了景观数千年。这些森林经历了与土地利用集约化相关的多次百年倒退-恢复事件,但最终在古典时期由于强烈的土地利用(包括强烈的畜牧业),松树在大约 2500-2000 年前衰退。这是现代景观的起点,古代森林的主要“基础”分类群(黑松 cf. 黑松)缺失,因此证明了历史土地利用对现代景观的强烈影响。