4.7 Article

Response of vegetation and fire to Little Ice Age climate change: regional continuity and landscape heterogeneity

期刊

LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
卷 22, 期 -, 页码 25-41

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-007-9133-3

关键词

charcoal analysis; fire history; landscape history; little ice age; climatic change; pollen analysis; sand plain; vegetation history; wisconsin

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Late-Holocene climatic conditions in the upper Great Lakes region have changed sufficiently to produce significant changes in vegetation and fire regimes. The objective of this study was to determine how the vegetation mosaic and fire regimes on an oak (Quercus spp.)- and pine (Pines spp.)-dominated sand plain in northwestern Wisconsin responded to climatic changes of the past 1,200 years. We used pollen and charcoal records from a network of sites to investigate the range of natural variability of vegetation on a 1,500-km(2) landscape on the southern part of the sand plain. A major vegetation shift from jack pine (Pines banksiana) and red pine (P. resinosa) to increased abundance of white pine (P. strobus) occurred between 700 and 600 calendar years before present (cal yr BP), apparently corresponding to more mesic conditions regionally. A decrease in charcoal accumulation rate also occurred at most sites but was not synchronous with the vegetation change. At some sites there were further changes in vegetation and fire regimes occurring similar to 500-300 cal yr BP, but these changes were not as strong or unidirectional as those that occurred 700-600 cal yr BP. Our results suggest that both the composition and the distribution of vegetation of the southern part of the sand plain have been sensitive to relatively small climatic changes, and that the vegetation at the time of European settlement was a transitory phenomenon, rather than a long-term stable condition.

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