Preliminary evidence for green, brown and black worlds in tropical western Africa during the Middle and Late Pleistocene

W. Gosling, C. McMichael, Zoë Groenewoud, Eleonora Roding, Charlotte S. Miller, Adele C. M. Julier
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

: Modern ecological studies indicate that the degree of openness in African vegetation cover is determined, in part, by the presence of herbivores and fire as consumers of vegetation. Where herbivores are the dominant consumer of vegetation the resultant open state is described as a ‘brown’ world. Where fire is the dominant consumer of vegetation the resultant open state is described as a ‘black’ world. While if neither consumer is dominant then a more closed canopy states arises that is described as a ‘green’world. Here we use palaeoecological data obtained from Lake Bosumtwi (Ghana) to characterize green, brown, and black worlds during two short sections of around 1000 years each, deposited around 200,000 and 100,000 years ago (Middle and Late Pleistocene). We characterize the vegetation cover using pollen and phytoliths, herbivory using Sporormiella and fire using micro-charcoal. We find that during c . 1000 years of the Middle Pleistocene fire was the major consumer of vegetation, while during c . 1000 years in the Late Pleistocene herbivores were relatively more important consumers of vegetation. We therefore suggest that the Middle Pleistocene section represents a black world, while in the Late Pleistocene section we capture a combination of green, brown and black worlds. The duration of these states seems to range from centuries to millennia and transitions are observed to occur in both an abrupt and a stepwise fashion. These preliminary data demonstrate how palaeoecological information can be used to gain insights into past landscape scale processes over thousands of years. Further work is required to test the robustness of these findings and to provide a higher temporal resolution to aid the link with modern ecological studies.
在中更新世和晚更新世期间,热带西非存在绿色、棕色和黑色世界的初步证据
现代生态学研究表明,非洲植被覆盖的开放程度部分取决于作为植被消耗者的食草动物和火的存在。当食草动物是植被的主要消耗者时,由此产生的开放状态被描述为“棕色”世界。当火灾是植被的主要消耗者时,由此产生的开放状态被描述为“黑色”世界。然而,如果两个消费者都不是主导,那么一个更封闭的树冠状态就会出现,这被称为“绿色”世界。在这里,我们使用从Bosumtwi湖(加纳)获得的古生态数据来描述绿色、棕色和黑色世界在大约20万和10万年前(中更新世和晚更新世)沉积的两个短段,每个短段约1000年。我们用花粉和植物岩来描述植被覆盖,用孢子菌来描述草食,用微炭来描述火。我们发现在c。中更新世1000年的火灾是植被的主要消耗者;1000年前的晚更新世食草动物是相对更重要的植被消耗者。因此,我们认为中更新世剖面代表了一个黑色世界,而在晚更新世剖面中,我们捕获了绿色、棕色和黑色世界的组合。这些状态的持续时间似乎从几个世纪到几千年不等,并且观察到过渡以突然和逐步的方式发生。这些初步数据表明,如何利用古生态信息来深入了解过去数千年来的景观尺度过程。需要进一步的工作来检验这些发现的稳健性,并提供更高的时间分辨率,以帮助将其与现代生态学研究联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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