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Biome- and timescale-dependence of Holocene vegetation variability in the Northern Hemisphere. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global climatic changes will lead to significant vegetation disturbances, affecting ecosystem services, requiring a better understanding of natural vegetation variability over long timescales.
  • Researchers analyzed a global fossil pollen dataset to characterize vegetation changes during the Holocene using statistical methods, revealing notable fluctuations in vegetation composition from shorter to longer timescales.
  • The study found that open-land vegetation exhibits greater variability than forests, with needleleaf forests showing more variability in the short term while broadleaf forests stabilize over millennial timescales, likely influenced by fire regimes.

Article Abstract

Global climatic changes expected in the next centuries are likely to cause unparalleled vegetation disturbances, which in turn impact ecosystem services. To assess the significance of disturbances, it is necessary to characterize and understand typical natural vegetation variability on multi-decadal timescales and longer. We investigate this in the Holocene vegetation by examining a taxonomically harmonized and temporally standardized global fossil pollen dataset. Using principal component analysis, we characterize the variability in pollen assemblages, which are a proxy for vegetation composition, and derive timescale-dependent estimates of variability using the first-order Haar structure function. We find, on average, increasing fluctuations in vegetation composition from centennial to millennial timescales, as well as spatially coherent patterns of variability. We further relate these variations to pairwise comparisons between biome classes based on vegetation composition. As such, higher variability is identified for open-land vegetation compared to forests. This is consistent with the more active fire regimes of open-land biomes fostering variability. Needleleaf forests are more variable than broadleaf forests on shorter (centennial) timescales, but the inverse is true on longer (millennial) timescales. This inversion could also be explained by the fire characteristics of the biomes as fire disturbances would increase vegetation variability on shorter timescales, but stabilize vegetation composition on longer timecales by preventing the migration of less fire-adapted species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10598260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10585DOI Listing

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