4.4 Article

Changes in fire activity and biodiversity in a Northeast Brazilian Cerrado over the last 800 years

Journal

ANTHROPOCENE
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ancene.2022.100356

Keywords

Pollen; Charcoal; Human impact; Climate change; Land use; Conservation unit

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior - Brasil (CAPES) [001, CAPES/PRINT/UFC 88881.311770/2018-01]
  2. project CNPQ/ICMBIO/FAPs [18/2017]

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Understanding vegetation dynamics is crucial for interpreting long-term ecological changes in northeastern Brazil. This study analyzed a high-resolution record from the Cerrado landscape and found that vegetation underwent restructuring during dry and wet periods. The study also revealed the impact of historical human activities on vegetation changes, including fires and deforestation.
Understanding vegetation dynamics is essential to interpret long-term ecological changes under different precipitation regimes and land use scenarios. Northeastern Brazil has been subjected to both climatic and anthropic disturbances in recent centuries. This paper presents a high-resolution record from the SAC18 sediment core, collected in a Cerrado ecotone in the Sete Cidades National Park. Multiproxy analyses based on pollen, charcoal and grain size showed the Cerrado landscape was restructured during dry and wet intervals over a period of 800 years. The beginning of the record was marked by a dry episode, testified by the presence of a drought resistant taxon Curatella (wild cashew tree) and coincided with the Medieval Climate Anomaly (950-1250 CE). Almost no fire activity was observed between 1210 and 1300 CE, linked to reduced human presence during this dry period. A wetter interval began in 1400 CE, with expansion of the palm swamp and the moisture-related tree/herbaceous taxa Myrtaceae and Spathiphyllum, which was synchronous with the Little Ice Age (1400-1700 CE). Reduced burning of biomass and the absence of deforestation at the beginning of the wet interval changed to extensive fires and deforestation after 1650 CE, enabling dating of the arrival of European colonists in the north of Piaui State. Fires stopped after the creation of Sete Cidades National Park in 1961 CE, resulting in the expansion of the Cerrado arboreal cover. This study provides new knowledge about past human occupation of the Northeastern Cerrado, defined by three types of land use practices (indigenous, colonist and protection policy), and underlines the importance of including historical aspects of the landscape in future conservation scenarios.

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