4.2 Article

Influences of sea level changes and volcanic eruptions on Holocene vegetation in Tonga

Journal

BIOTROPICA
Volume 55, Issue 4, Pages 816-827

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/btp.13231

Keywords

anthropogenic impacts; human impacts; paleoecology; pollen analysis; Polynesia; sea level; tephra; Tonga

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In this study, we investigated how changing sea levels and recurrent volcanic eruptions have influenced vegetation dynamics in low-lying coastal areas in Tonga. We analyzed pollen, charcoal, and sediment characteristics from a sediment core to examine past vegetation and environmental change. We found that relative sea level change has impacted vegetation on three out of the four investigated islands, while volcanic eruptions were not identified as a driver of vegetation change.
Here, we investigate Mid- to Late-Holocene vegetation changes in low-lying coastal areas in Tonga and how changing sea levels and recurrent volcanic eruptions have influenced vegetation dynamics on four islands of the Tongan archipelago (South Pacific). To investigate past vegetation and environmental change at Ngofe Marsh ('Uta Vava'u), we examined palynomorphs (pollen and spores), charcoal (fire), and sediment characteristics (volcanic activity) from a 6.7-m-long sediment core. Radiocarbon dating indicated the sediments were deposited over the last 7700 years. We integrated the Ngofe Marsh data with similar previously published data from Avai'o'vuna Swamp on Pangaimotu Island, Lotofoa Swamp on Foa Island, and Finemui Swamp on Ha'afeva Island. Plant taxa were categorized as littoral, mangrove, rainforest, successional/ disturbance, and wetland groups, and linear models were used to examine relationships between vegetation, relative sea level change, and volcanic eruptions (tephra). We found that relative sea level change has impacted vegetation on three of the four islands investigated. Volcanic eruptions were not identified as a driver of vegetation change. Rainforest decline does not appear to be driven by sea level changes or volcanic eruptions. From all sites analyzed, vegetation at Finemui Swamp was most sensitive to changes in relative sea level. While vegetation on low-lying Pacific islands is sensitive to changing sea levels, island characteristics, such as area and elevation, are also likely to be important factors that mediate specific island responses to drivers of change.

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