Affiliation:
1. School of Geography and Environmental Science University of Southampton Southampton UK
2. Island Ecology and Biogeography Group Instituto Universitario de Enfermedades Tropicales y Salud Pública de Canarias Universidad de La Laguna La Laguna Spain
3. School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford Oxford UK
4. Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate GLOBE Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark
5. Linking Landscape Environment, Agriculture and Food (LEAF) Instituto Superior de Agronomia (ISA) Universidade de Lisboa Lisboa Portugal
6. GAU‐Radioanalytical School of Ocean and Earth Science University of Southampton National Oceanography Centre (Southampton) Southampton UK
Abstract
AbstractAimPalaeoecological data provide an essential long‐term perspective of ecological change and its drivers in oceanic islands. However, analysing the effects of multi‐scalar and potentially co‐occurring disturbances is particularly challenging in dry islands. Here, we aim to identify the ecological consequences of the integrated impacts of a regional drying trend, volcanic eruptions and human mass migrations in a spatially constrained environment—a small, dry oceanic island in Macaronesia.LocationBrava Island, Republic of Cabo Verde.TaxaTerrestrial vegetation and fungi.MethodsWe use palaeoecological analyses applied to a caldera soil profile that dates back to 9700 cal yr BP (calibrated years before the present). Analyses include pollen (vegetation history), non‐pollen palynomorphs (changes in fern and fungal communities), grain‐size distribution, loss‐on‐ignition and geochemistry (sedimentology and erosion regimes), microscopic tephra shards (volcanic ash deposition) and charcoal (fire regime).ResultsA regional drying trend after c. 4000 cal yr BP caused increased erosion but had limited immediate impacts on highland grassland vegetation. The expansion of fern‐rich woody scrubland was contemporaneous with significant deposition of volcanic ash and erosion between 1800 and 650 cal yr BP. About 300 cal yr BP, exogenous plants expanded, grazing and fires increased, and there was a decrease of native vegetation cover.Main conclusionsThroughout the Holocene, highland vegetation in Brava was characterized by the presence of open landscapes dominated by herbaceous species (e.g. Poaceae, Forsskaolea), with some presence of woody native taxa (e.g. Ficus, Dodonaea). A regional drying trend was a driver of erosion since the Mid Holocene but did not have an immediate influence on highland vegetation. Tephra deposition is a possible driver of vegetation change. Inter‐island mass migration after volcanic events in Fogo Island c. 1680 CE potentially triggered land use change and intensification, causing a reduction of native vegetation in Brava.
Funder
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
University of Southampton
Royal Geographical Society
Reference76 articles.
1. Twelve thousand years of dust: the Holocene global dust cycle constrained by natural archives
2. Arechavaleta Hernández M. Pérez N. Z. Gómez M. C. M. &Esquivel J. M.(2005).Lista preliminar de especies silvestres de Cabo Verde. Hongos Plantas y Animales Terrestres. In: Gobierno de Canarias. Consejería de Medio Ambiente y Ordenación Territorial.
3. Positive precipitation–evaporation budget from AD 460 to 1090 in the Saloum Delta (Senegal) indicated by mollusk oxygen isotopes
4. Island Futures
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献