Does Fire Drive Quaternary Ecosystem Transformation at Lake Tulane, Florida?

Angelina G. Perrotti, Miranda Siedelmann, Jocelyn Lam, J. Russell, John Williams
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Abstract

Ecosystems across the world are experiencing seemingly unprecedented fire activity due to changes in land use and climate. However, disentangling the drivers of fire regime intensification is difficult when climate and land use changes occur simultaneously. Thus, multi-proxy paleoecological records with evidence for climate, vegetation composition, and fire regime changes can provide valuable frameworks in which to interpret modern environmental shifts. Lake Tulane, Florida, offers an iconic record of vegetation responses to Heinrich Events and other climate variations over the last 60,000 years, but its fire history is unknown. Here we present the results of a 60,000-year fire history from Lake Tulane, Florida, based on sedimentary macro charcoal data at ca. 30-year resolution. Charcoal accumulation rates are highest in pre-32,000 year old sediments and decline toward the end of the Pleistocene. Fire activity was lowest during the period directly before the last glacial maximum (32,000 to 23,000 years ago). The end-Pleistocene record indicates on-going oscillations in fire activity from 22,000 to 10,000 years ago, but fire activity does not appear to be closely linked with pine/oak oscillations, thus indicating differential drivers of vegetation and fire change. Ultimately, the fire history at Lake Tulane is best understood in the context of other environmental factors such as millennial-scale climate variability, human influence, and megaherbivory.
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火灾是否推动了佛罗里达州杜兰湖第四纪生态系统的转变?
由于土地利用和气候的变化,世界各地的生态系统正在经历看似前所未有的火灾活动。然而,当气候和土地利用变化同时发生时,很难理清火情加剧的驱动因素。因此,具有气候、植被组成和火情变化证据的多代古生态记录可以为解释现代环境变化提供有价值的框架。佛罗里达州的杜兰湖提供了一个标志性的记录,记录了过去6万年里植被对海因里希事件和其他气候变化的反应,但它的火灾历史是未知的。在这里,我们基于30年分辨率的沉积宏观木炭数据,展示了佛罗里达州杜兰湖6万年的火灾历史的结果。木炭积累速率在32000年前的沉积物中最高,在更新世末期下降。在最后一次冰期高峰(32,000至23,000年前)之前的时期,火灾活动最低。更新世末期的记录表明,从2.2万年前到1万年前,火灾活动持续振荡,但火灾活动似乎与松树/橡树的振荡没有密切联系,因此表明植被和火灾变化的不同驱动因素。最终,杜兰湖的火灾历史最好在其他环境因素的背景下理解,如千年尺度的气候变化、人类影响和巨型食草动物。
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