Uncoupling human and climate drivers of late Holocene vegetation change in southern Brazil

In the highlands of southern Brazil an anthropogenitcally driven expansion of forest occurred at the expense of grasslands between 1410 and 900 cal BP, coincident with a period of demographic and cultural change in the region. Previous studies have debated the relative contributions of increasing we...

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Published in:Scientific reports Vol. 8; no. 1; pp. 7800 - 10
Main Authors: Robinson, Mark, De Souza, Jonas Gregorio, Maezumi, S. Yoshi, Cárdenas, Macarena, Pessenda, Luiz, Prufer, Keith, Corteletti, Rafael, Scunderlick, Deisi, Mayle, Francis Edward, De Blasis, Paulo, Iriarte, José
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London Nature Publishing Group UK 17-05-2018
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:In the highlands of southern Brazil an anthropogenitcally driven expansion of forest occurred at the expense of grasslands between 1410 and 900 cal BP, coincident with a period of demographic and cultural change in the region. Previous studies have debated the relative contributions of increasing wetter and warmer climate conditions and human landscape modifications to forest expansion, but generally lacked high resoltiuon proxies to measure these effects, or have relied on single proxies to reconstruct both climate and vegetation. Here, we develop and test a model of natural ecosystem distribution against vegetation histories, paleoclimate proxies, and the archaeological record to distinguish human from temperature and precipitation impacts on the distribution and expansion of Araucaria forests during the late Holocene. Carbon isotopes from soil profiles confirm that in spite of climatic fluctuations, vegetation was stable and forests were spatially limited to south-facing slopes in the absence of human inputs. In contrast, forest management strategies for the past 1400 years expanded this economically important forest beyond its natural geographic boundaries in areas of dense pre-Columbian occupation, suggesting that landscape modifications were linked to demographic changes, the effects of which are still visible today.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-018-24429-5