Postglacial vegetation dynamics of western Tierra del Fuego

2012 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Postglacial vegetation dynamics of western Tierra del Fuego​
Fontana, S. L. & Bennett, K. D.​ (2012) 
The Holocene22(11) pp. 1337​-1350​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683612444144 

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Authors
Fontana, Sonia L.; Bennett, K. D.
Abstract
The southern fringes of the South American landmass provide a rare opportunity to examine the development of moorland vegetation with sparse tree cover in a wet, cool temperate climate of the Southern Hemisphere. We present a record of changes in vegetation over the past 17,000 years, from a lake in extreme southern Chile (Isla Santa Ines, Magallanes region, 53 degrees 38.97S; 72 degrees 25.24W), where human influence on vegetation is negligible. The western archipelago of Tierra del Fuego remained treeless for most of the Lateglacial period; Lycopodium magellanicum, Gunnera magellanica and heath species dominated the vegetation. Nothofagus may have survived the last glacial maximum at the eastern edge of the Magellan glaciers from where it spread southwestwards and established in the region at around 10,500 cal. yr BP. Nothofagus antarctica was likely the earlier colonizing tree in the western islands, followed shortly after by Nothofagus betuloides. At 9000 cal. yr BP moorland communities expanded at the expense of Nothofagus woodland. Simultaneously, Nothofagus species shifted to dominance of the evergreen Nothofagus betuloides and the Magellanic rain forest established in the region. Rapid and drastic vegetation changes occurred at 5200 cal. yr BP, after the Mt Burney MB2 eruption, including the expansion and establishment of Pilgerodendron uviferum and the development of mixed Nothofagus-Pilgerodendron-Drimys woodland. Scattered populations of Nothofagus, as they occur today in westernmost Tierra del Fuego may be a good analogue for Nothofagus populations during the Lateglacial in eastern sites.
Issue Date
2012
Status
published
Publisher
Sage Publications Ltd
Journal
The Holocene 
ISSN
0959-6836

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