A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.

Human-caused forest transitions are documented worldwide, especially during periods when land use by dense agriculturally-based populations intensified. However, the rate at which prehistoric human activities led to permanent deforestation is poorly resolved. In the South Island, New Zealand, the ar...

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Main Authors: David B McWethy, Janet M Wilmshurst, Cathy Whitlock, Jamie R Wood, Matt S McGlone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4221023?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-572a898ddde249d09db1467a17259b392020-11-25T01:26:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01911e11132810.1371/journal.pone.0111328A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.David B McWethyJanet M WilmshurstCathy WhitlockJamie R WoodMatt S McGloneHuman-caused forest transitions are documented worldwide, especially during periods when land use by dense agriculturally-based populations intensified. However, the rate at which prehistoric human activities led to permanent deforestation is poorly resolved. In the South Island, New Zealand, the arrival of Polynesians c. 750 years ago resulted in dramatic forest loss and conversion of nearly half of native forests to open vegetation. This transformation, termed the Initial Burning Period, is documented in pollen and charcoal records, but its speed has been poorly constrained. High-resolution chronologies developed with a series of AMS radiocarbon dates from two lake sediment cores suggest the shift from forest to shrubland occurred within decades rather than centuries at drier sites. We examine two sites representing extreme examples of the magnitude of human impacts: a drier site that was inherently more vulnerable to human-set fires and a wetter, less burnable site. The astonishing rate of deforestation at the hands of small transient populations resulted from the intrinsic vulnerability of the native flora to fire and from positive feedbacks in post-fire vegetation recovery that increased landscape flammability. Spatially targeting burning in highly-flammable seral vegetation in forests rarely experiencing fire was sufficient to create an alternate fire-prone stable state. The New Zealand example illustrates how seemingly stable forest ecosystems can experience rapid and permanent conversions. Forest loss in New Zealand is among the fastest ecological transitions documented in the Holocene; yet equally rapid transitions can be expected in present-day regions wherever positive feedbacks support alternate fire-inhibiting, fire-prone stable states.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4221023?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David B McWethy
Janet M Wilmshurst
Cathy Whitlock
Jamie R Wood
Matt S McGlone
spellingShingle David B McWethy
Janet M Wilmshurst
Cathy Whitlock
Jamie R Wood
Matt S McGlone
A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.
PLoS ONE
author_facet David B McWethy
Janet M Wilmshurst
Cathy Whitlock
Jamie R Wood
Matt S McGlone
author_sort David B McWethy
title A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.
title_short A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.
title_full A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.
title_fullStr A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.
title_full_unstemmed A high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in New Zealand.
title_sort high-resolution chronology of rapid forest transitions following polynesian arrival in new zealand.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Human-caused forest transitions are documented worldwide, especially during periods when land use by dense agriculturally-based populations intensified. However, the rate at which prehistoric human activities led to permanent deforestation is poorly resolved. In the South Island, New Zealand, the arrival of Polynesians c. 750 years ago resulted in dramatic forest loss and conversion of nearly half of native forests to open vegetation. This transformation, termed the Initial Burning Period, is documented in pollen and charcoal records, but its speed has been poorly constrained. High-resolution chronologies developed with a series of AMS radiocarbon dates from two lake sediment cores suggest the shift from forest to shrubland occurred within decades rather than centuries at drier sites. We examine two sites representing extreme examples of the magnitude of human impacts: a drier site that was inherently more vulnerable to human-set fires and a wetter, less burnable site. The astonishing rate of deforestation at the hands of small transient populations resulted from the intrinsic vulnerability of the native flora to fire and from positive feedbacks in post-fire vegetation recovery that increased landscape flammability. Spatially targeting burning in highly-flammable seral vegetation in forests rarely experiencing fire was sufficient to create an alternate fire-prone stable state. The New Zealand example illustrates how seemingly stable forest ecosystems can experience rapid and permanent conversions. Forest loss in New Zealand is among the fastest ecological transitions documented in the Holocene; yet equally rapid transitions can be expected in present-day regions wherever positive feedbacks support alternate fire-inhibiting, fire-prone stable states.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4221023?pdf=render
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