Fire-human-climate interactions in the Bolivian Amazon rainforest ecotone from the Last Glacial Maximum to late Holocene

S. Y. Maezumi, Mitchell J. Power, Richard J. Smith, K. McLauchlan, Andrea Brunelle, Christopher Carleton, Andrea U. Kay, Patrick Roberts, F. E. Mayle
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Abstract

The Amazon Rainforest Ecotone (the ARF-Ecotone) of the southwestern Amazon Basin is a transitional landscape from tropical evergreen rainforests and seasonally flooded savannahs to savannah woodlands and semi-deciduous dry forests. While fire activity plays an integral role in ARF-Ecotones, recent interactions between human activity and increased temperatures and prolonged droughts driven by anthropogenic climate change threaten to accelerate habitat transformation through positive feedbacks, increasing future fire susceptibility, fuel loads, and fire intensity. The long-term factors driving fire in the ARF-Ecotone remain poorly understood because of the challenge of disentangling the effects of prolonged climatic variability since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ~24,000 to 11,000 cal BP) and over 10,500 years of human occupation in the region. To investigate this issue, we implement an interdisciplinary framework incorporating multiple lake sediment cores, with varying basin characteristics with existing regional palaeoclimatological and archaeological data. These data indicate expansive C4 grasslands coupled with low fire activity during the LGM, higher sensitivity of small basins to detecting local-scale fire activity, and increased spatial diversity of fire during the Holocene (~10,500 cal year BP to the limit of our records ~4,000 cal year BP), despite a similar regional climate. This may be attributed to increased human-driven fire. These data raise the intriguing possibility that the composition of modern flora at NKMNP developed as part of a co-evolutionary process between people and plants that started at the beginning of the ARE occupation.
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从末次冰川极盛期到全新世晚期玻利维亚亚马逊雨林生态区火灾与人类和气候的相互作用
亚马逊盆地西南部的亚马逊雨林生态带(ARF-Ecotone)是从热带常绿雨林和季节性洪涝热带稀树草原向热带稀树草原林地和半落叶干旱森林过渡的景观。虽然火灾活动在 ARF-Ecotones 地区扮演着不可或缺的角色,但最近人类活动与人为气候变化导致的气温升高和长期干旱之间的相互作用,有可能通过正反馈加速栖息地的转变,增加未来火灾的易发性、燃料负荷和火灾强度。由于难以将末次冰川极盛时期(LGM,约为公元前 24,000 至 11,000 年)以来的长期气候多变性和该地区 10,500 多年的人类活动的影响区分开来,人们对驱动 ARF-Ecotone 地区火灾的长期因素仍然知之甚少。为了研究这个问题,我们采用了一个跨学科框架,将具有不同流域特征的多个湖泊沉积物岩心与现有的区域古气候学和考古学数据结合起来。这些数据表明,尽管区域气候相似,但在全新世(约公元前 10,500 年至我们记录的极限约公元前 4,000 年)期间,广阔的 C4 草原与低火灾活动相结合,小盆地对检测局部范围火灾活动的敏感性更高,火灾的空间多样性增加。这可能归因于人类驱动的火灾增加。这些数据提出了一个引人入胜的可能性,即 NKMNP 现代植物区系的组成是人与植物共同进化过程的一部分,这一过程始于 ARE 占领初期。
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