4.8 Article

Rapid landscape transformation in South Island, New Zealand, following initial Polynesian settlement

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1011801107

关键词

human impacts; land cover change; deforestation

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [OISE-0966472, BCS-0645821]
  2. Royal Society of New Zealand [05-LCR-005-SOC]
  3. New Zealand Foundation for Research Science and Technology under the Ecosystem Resilience Output Based Investment
  4. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  5. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [1024413] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering
  7. Office Of The Director [966472] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Humans have altered natural patterns of fire for millennia, but the impact of human-set fires is thought to have been slight in wet closed-canopy forests. In the South Island of New Zealand, Polynesians (Maori), who arrived 700-800 calibrated years (cal y) ago, and then Europeans, who settled similar to 150 cal y ago, used fire as a tool for forest clearance, but the structure and environmental consequences of these fires are poorly understood. High-resolution charcoal and pollen records from 16 lakes were analyzed to reconstruct the fire and vegetation history of the last 1,000 y. Diatom, chironomid, and element concentration data were examined to identify disturbance-related limnobiotic and biogeochemical changes within burned watersheds. At most sites, several high-severity fire events occurred within the first two centuries of Maori arrival and were often accompanied by a transformation in vegetation, slope stability, and lake chemistry. Proxies of past climate suggest that human activity alone, rather than unusually dry or warm conditions, was responsible for this increased fire activity. The transformation of scrub to grassland by Europeans in the mid-19th century triggered further, sometimes severe, watershed change, through additional fires, erosion, and the introduction of nonnative plant species. Alteration of natural disturbance regimes had lasting impacts, primarily because native forests had little or no previous history of fire and little resilience to the severity of burning. Anthropogenic burning in New Zealand highlights the vulnerability of closed-canopy forests to novel disturbance regimes and suggests that similar settings may be less resilient to climate-induced changes in the future.

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