Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa

Pollen data collected in Africa at high (Kuruyange, valley swamp, Burundi) and low altitude (Victoria, lake, Uganda; Ngamakala, pond, Congo) showed that after 6 ky before present (BP), pollen of deciduous trees increase their relative percentage, suggesting thus the reduction of the annual amount of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: E. S. Gritti, C. Cassignat, O. Flores, R. Bonnefille, F. Chalié, J. Guiot, D. Jolly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-03-01
Series:Climate of the Past
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/6/169/2010/cp-6-169-2010.pdf
id doaj-5a6f774a818d43c48906db5fe4c5c0f3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5a6f774a818d43c48906db5fe4c5c0f32020-11-24T23:31:23ZengCopernicus PublicationsClimate of the Past1814-93241814-93322010-03-016216917810.5194/cp-6-169-2010Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical AfricaE. S. GrittiC. CassignatO. FloresR. BonnefilleF. ChaliéJ. GuiotD. JollyPollen data collected in Africa at high (Kuruyange, valley swamp, Burundi) and low altitude (Victoria, lake, Uganda; Ngamakala, pond, Congo) showed that after 6 ky before present (BP), pollen of deciduous trees increase their relative percentage, suggesting thus the reduction of the annual amount of precipitation and/or an increase of in the length of the dry season. Until now, pollen-climate transfer functions only investigated mean annual precipitation, due to the absence of modern pollen-assemblage analogs under diversified precipitation regimes. Hence these functions omit the potential effect of a change in precipitation seasonality modifying thus the length of the dry season. In the present study, we use an equilibrium biosphere model (i.e. BIOME3.5) to estimate the sensitivity of equatorial African vegetation, at specific sites, to such changes. Climatic scenarios, differing only in the monthly distribution of the current annual amount of precipitation, are examined at the above three locations in equatorial Africa. Soil characteristics, monthly temperatures and cloudiness are kept constant at their present-day values. Good agreement is shown between model simulations and current biomes assemblages, as inferred from pollen data. To date, the increase of the deciduous forest component in the palaeodata around 6 ky BP has been interpreted as the beginning of a drier climate period. However, our results demonstrate that a change in the seasonal distribution of precipitation could also induce the observed changes in vegetation types. This study confirms the importance of taking into account seasonal changes in the hydrological balance. Palaeoecologists can greatly benefit from the use of dynamic process based vegetation models to acccount for modification of the length of the dry season when they wish to reconstruct vegetation composition or to infer quantitative climate parameters, such as temperature and precipitation, from pollen or vegetation proxy. http://www.clim-past.net/6/169/2010/cp-6-169-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E. S. Gritti
C. Cassignat
O. Flores
R. Bonnefille
F. Chalié
J. Guiot
D. Jolly
spellingShingle E. S. Gritti
C. Cassignat
O. Flores
R. Bonnefille
F. Chalié
J. Guiot
D. Jolly
Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa
Climate of the Past
author_facet E. S. Gritti
C. Cassignat
O. Flores
R. Bonnefille
F. Chalié
J. Guiot
D. Jolly
author_sort E. S. Gritti
title Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa
title_short Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa
title_full Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa
title_fullStr Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa
title_full_unstemmed Simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical Africa
title_sort simulated effects of a seasonal precipitation change on the vegetation in tropical africa
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Climate of the Past
issn 1814-9324
1814-9332
publishDate 2010-03-01
description Pollen data collected in Africa at high (Kuruyange, valley swamp, Burundi) and low altitude (Victoria, lake, Uganda; Ngamakala, pond, Congo) showed that after 6 ky before present (BP), pollen of deciduous trees increase their relative percentage, suggesting thus the reduction of the annual amount of precipitation and/or an increase of in the length of the dry season. Until now, pollen-climate transfer functions only investigated mean annual precipitation, due to the absence of modern pollen-assemblage analogs under diversified precipitation regimes. Hence these functions omit the potential effect of a change in precipitation seasonality modifying thus the length of the dry season. In the present study, we use an equilibrium biosphere model (i.e. BIOME3.5) to estimate the sensitivity of equatorial African vegetation, at specific sites, to such changes. Climatic scenarios, differing only in the monthly distribution of the current annual amount of precipitation, are examined at the above three locations in equatorial Africa. Soil characteristics, monthly temperatures and cloudiness are kept constant at their present-day values. Good agreement is shown between model simulations and current biomes assemblages, as inferred from pollen data. To date, the increase of the deciduous forest component in the palaeodata around 6 ky BP has been interpreted as the beginning of a drier climate period. However, our results demonstrate that a change in the seasonal distribution of precipitation could also induce the observed changes in vegetation types. This study confirms the importance of taking into account seasonal changes in the hydrological balance. Palaeoecologists can greatly benefit from the use of dynamic process based vegetation models to acccount for modification of the length of the dry season when they wish to reconstruct vegetation composition or to infer quantitative climate parameters, such as temperature and precipitation, from pollen or vegetation proxy.
url http://www.clim-past.net/6/169/2010/cp-6-169-2010.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT esgritti simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
AT ccassignat simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
AT oflores simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
AT rbonnefille simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
AT fchalie simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
AT jguiot simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
AT djolly simulatedeffectsofaseasonalprecipitationchangeonthevegetationintropicalafrica
_version_ 1725538249567371264