Fire, climate change and biodiversity in Amazonia: a Late-Holocene perspective

被引:136
作者
Bush, M. B. [1 ]
Silman, M. R. [2 ]
McMichael, C. [1 ]
Saatchi, S. [3 ]
机构
[1] Florida Inst Technol, Dept Biol Sci, Melbourne, FL 32901 USA
[2] Wake Forest Univ, Dept Biol, Winston Salem, NC 27104 USA
[3] CALTECH, Jet Prop Lab, Pasadena, CA 91109 USA
关键词
neotropical; charcoal; fire; migration; solar minimum; warming;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2007.0014
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Fire is an important and arguably unnatural component of many wet Amazonian and Andean forest systems. Soil charcoal has been used to infer widespread human use of landscapes prior to European Conquest. An analysis of Amazonian soil carbon records reveals that the records have distinct spatial and temporal patterns, suggesting that either fires were only set in moderately seasonal areas of Amazonia or that strongly seasonal and aseasonal areas are undersampled. Synthesizing data from 300 charcoal records, an age-frequency diagram reveals peaks of fire apparently coinciding with some periods of very strong El Nino activity. However, the El Nino record does not always provide an accurate prediction of fire timing, and a better match is found in the record of insolation minima. After the time of European contact, fires became much scarcer within Amazonia. In both the Amazonia and the Andes, modern fire pattern is strongly allied to human activity. On the flank of the Andes, forests that have never burned are being eroded by fire spreading downslope from grasslands. Species of these same forests are being forced to migrate upslope due to warming and will encounter a firm artificial fire boundary of human activity.
引用
收藏
页码:1795 / 1802
页数:8
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