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- Title
Temperate rainforest response to climate change and disturbance agents in northwestern Patagonia (41°S) over the last 2600years
- Authors
Jara, Ignacio A.; Moreno, Patricio I.
- Abstract
Abstract: We present detailed pollen and charcoal records from Lago Pichilafquén (~41°S) to decipher the effects of climate change and varying disturbance regimes on the composition and structure of the vegetation on the Andean foothills of northwestern Patagonia during the last 2600yr. Here, temperate rainforests have dominated the landscape since 2600calyr BP with variations ranging from cool-temperate and wet north Patagonian rainforests to relatively warm and summer-drought-resistant Valdivian rainforests. We interpret relatively warm/dry conditions between 1900–2600, 690–750 and 320–430calyr BP, alternating with cold/wet conditions between 1500–1900, 750–1100 and 430–690calyr BP. Rapid deforestation and spread of plants introduced by Europeans occurred at 320 and 140calyr BP. The record includes five tephras with ages of 2130, 1460, 1310, 1210, and 340calyr BP, all of which precede local fire events and increases in trees favored by disturbance by less than 100yr. We conclude that centennial-scale changes in the southern westerlies were the primary driver of vegetation shifts in northwestern Patagonia over the last 2600yr. Within this interval, local disturbance regimes altered the structure, composition, and dynamics of the lowland rainforest vegetation during several discrete, short-lived episodes.
- Subjects
PATAGONIA (Argentina &; Chile); ARGENTINA; CHILE; RAIN forests; CLIMATE change; PALYNOLOGY; VEGETATION &; climate; CHARCOAL analysis (Archaeology)
- Publication
Quaternary Research, 2012, Vol 77, Issue 2, p235
- ISSN
0033-5894
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1016/j.yqres.2011.11.011