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The pace of Holocene vegetation change – testing for synchronous developments
Authors:Thomas Giesecke  KD Bennett  H John B Birks  Anne E Bjune  Elisaveta Bozilova  Angelica Feurdean  Walter Finsinger  Cynthia Froyd  Petr Pokorný  Manfred Rösch  Heikki Seppä  Spasimir Tonkov  Verushka Valsecchi  Steffen Wolters
Institution:1. Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Uni Research Climate, Allégaten 55, N-5007 Bergen, Norway;2. Department of Biology, University of Bergen, PO Box 7803, N-5020 Bergen, Norway;3. Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Allégaten 55, N-5007 Bergen, Norway;4. Environmental Change Research Centre, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK;5. School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK;1. Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED), University of Amsterdam, Science Park 904, 1098 XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Section 5.2 Climate Dynamics and Landscape Evolution, Telegrafenberg, D-14473, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract:Mid to high latitude forest ecosystems have undergone several major compositional changes during the Holocene. The temporal and spatial patterns of these vegetation changes hold potential information to their causes and triggers. Here we test the hypothesis that the timing of vegetation change was synchronous on a sub-continental scale, which implies a common trigger or a step-like change in climate parameters. Pollen diagrams from selected European regions were statistically divided into assemblage zones and the temporal pattern of the zone boundaries analysed. The results show that the temporal pattern of vegetation change was significantly different from random. Times of change cluster around 8.2, 4.8, 3.7, and 1.2 ka, while times of higher than average stability were found around 2.1 and 5.1 ka. Compositional changes linked to the expansion of Corylus avellana and Alnus glutinosa centre around 10.6 and 9.5 ka, respectively. A climatic trigger initiating these changes may have occurred 0.5 to 1 ka earlier, respectively. The synchronous expansion of C. avellana and A. glutinosa exemplify that dispersal is not necessarily followed by population expansion. The partly synchronous, partly random expansion of A. glutinosa in adjacent European regions exemplifies that sudden synchronous population expansions are not species specific traits but vary regionally.
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