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Lowland rainforest response to hydrological changes during the last 1500 years in Gabon, Western Equatorial Africa
Authors:Alfred Ngomanda  Dominique Jolly  Ilhem Bentaleb  Alex Chepstow-Lusty  M'voubou Makaya  Jean Maley  Michel Fontugne  Richard Oslisly  Nicaise Rabenkogo
Institution:a Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier, UMR 5554, Université de Montpellier II Place Eugène Bataillon, cc 61, 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
b Centre de Bio-Archéologie et d'Ecologie (UMR 5059-CNRS/UM2/EPHE), Institut de Botanique, 163 rue Broussonnet, F-34090, Montpellier, France
c Laboratoire d'Etude de Géo-Environnements Marins, Université de Perpignan 52, Avenue Paul Alduy, 66000 Perpignan, France
d Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement, UMR CEA/CNRS 1572, Domaine du CNRS, 91198 Gif sur Yvette cedex, France
e Wildlife Conservation Society, BP 7847 Libreville, Gabon and IRD, 5 rue du Carbone, 45072 Orléans cedex 2, France
f IRSH/GREH, Centre National de Recherche Scientifique et Technique (CENAREST), BP 846 Libreville, Gabon
Abstract:Pollen and δ13CTOM data obtained from two contrasting lake sequences (Lakes Kamalété and Nguène), located 200 km apart in the lowland rainforest of Gabon, provide complementary local and regional 1500-yr records of high resolution (15–30 yr) vegetation change. A combination of aquatic, semi-aquatic and terrestrial pollen showed in both records that the tropical rainforest increased during periods of high rainfall and decreased during drought intervals. The strong fluctuations of water balance at decadal scale during the “Medieval Warm Period” (not, vert, similar 1100–800 cal yr BP) coincided with a noticeable increase in shade-intolerant taxa, indicating recurring rainforest canopy disturbance. The δ13CTOM signal showed high-amplitude variations in both records, which positively correlates with the rainforest dynamics and local vegetation changes. The similar trends in both the pollen and the δ13CTOM signals between these sites demonstrate the regional broadly synchronous timing of shifting hydrological conditions. The largely positive co-variation between strong fluctuations of hydrological conditions and changes in rainforest structure and composition indicate that regional climatic change is probably the driving force for major rainforest dynamics in Gabon. Any significant anthropogenic impact on vegetation has not been clearly identified, and this issue still needs to be resolved independently by obtaining detailed archeological records across the interval 1400–800 BP, which currently seem to be extremely rare or not easily available.
Keywords:Pollen  Carbon isotopes  Lake-level changes  Rainforest response  Canopy disturbance  Gabon  Late Holocene
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