Holocene heathland development in temperate oceanic Southern Hemisphere: Key drivers in a global context
Loading...
Date
Authors
Adeleye, Matthew Adesanya
Haberle, Simon Graeme
Harris, Stephen
Hopf, Felicitas Viktoria-Louise
Connor, Simon
Stevenson, Janelle
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Access Statement
Abstract
Aim: Understanding long-term heathland development is key in mitigating their current
attrition globally. However, such knowledge is limited in Australia and the wider
Southern Hemisphere. We aim to identify potential climatic and environmental drivers
of Holocene heathland development in temperate-oceanic Australia (Bass Strait),
and also assess the applicability of Iversen's conceptual model of interglacial vegetation
development to the area.
Location: Bass Strait, southeast Australia.
Taxon: Monotoca, Epacris, Sprengelia and Restionaceae.
Methods: We used multiple sedimentary pollen and charcoal records from truwana/
Cape Barren Island (CBI) in Bass Strait to reconstruct vegetation and fire history. We
also used rarefaction analysis on pollen records to estimate floristic richness for all
sites, and magnetic susceptibility and organic content were derived for two of the
four sites as proxies for local sedimentary changes. Reconstructed vegetation and
fire histories were then compared to independent records of climate and sea-level
change in temperate Australia, using a Detrended Correspondence Analysis ordination,
to identify major drivers of heathland development.
Results: Major heathland expansion occurred on truwana/CBI between the early
and mid-Holocene in response to sea-level rise, high effective precipitation, reduced
seasonality and increased Indigenous burning. Increasing seasonality, low effective
precipitation, El Niño-Southern Oscillation intensification, stable sea level, and decreased
fire activity drove the expansion of scrub and woodland at the expense of
heathland in the late Holocene. The overall vegetation development on truwana/CBI
fits poorly with the classic Iversen conceptual model of interglacial vegetation development
in the Northern Hemisphere, due to the significant role of interglacial sealevel
rise on truwana/CBI. Therefore, a modified model, which takes into account the
role of sea-level change, is proposed for Southern Hemisphere-temperate-oceanic
settings.
Main conclusions: Heathland developments in both hemispheres reflect some level
of homogeneity, considering the roles of increased Indigenous burning and reduced
seasonality in both hemispheres. Frequent, controlled burning strategies are recommended
to maintain heathland on truwana/CBI.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Biogeography
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31