4.8 Article

A stronger role for long-term moisture change than for CO2 in determining tropical woody vegetation change

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SCIENCE
卷 376, 期 6593, 页码 653-+

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abg4618

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  1. NERC/The Open University Charter studentship [NE/H525054/1]
  2. NERC New Investigator Award [NE/G000824/1]

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This study explores the relative importance of six drivers of vegetation change in western Africa over the past 500,000 years by combining past environmental change data from Lake Bosumtwi in Ghana with global data. The results show that moisture availability and fire activity were the most important factors in determining woody cover, while the effect of CO2 was small.
Anthropogenically elevated CO2 (eCO(2)) concentrations have been suggested to increase woody cover within tropical ecosystems through fertilization. The effect of eCO(2) is built into Earth system models, although testing the relationship over long periods remains challenging. Here, we explore the relative importance of six drivers of vegetation change in western Africa over the past similar to 500,000 years (moisture availability, fire activity, mammalian herbivore density, temperature, temperature seasonality, CO2) by coupling past environmental change data from Lake Bosumtwi (Ghana) with global data. We found that moisture availability and fire activity were the most important factors in determining woody cover, whereas the effect of CO2 was small. Our findings suggest that the role of eCO(2) effects on tropical vegetation in predictive models must be reconsidered.

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