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Abrupt late Pleistocene ecological and climate change on Tahiti (French Polynesia)
journal contribution
posted on 2016-01-01, 00:00 authored by M Prebble, R Whitau, J Y Meyer, L Sibley-Punnett, S Fallon, Nicholas PorchNicholas PorchAim: To reconstruct ecological changes from the fossil record of a unique wetland on the tropical oceanic island of Tahiti, between 44.5 and 38 cal. kyr bp. Location: Vaifanaura'amo'ora, Tamanu Plateau, Punaru'u Valley, Tahiti, Society Islands, French Polynesia (17°38'S, 149°32'50″E). Methods: Fossil pollen, spores, seeds, diatoms and invertebrates were examined from a 3.7 m core consisting of Pleistocene-aged algal sediment overlain by late Holocene peat. Results: Between 44.5 and 41.5 cal. kyr bp, Ficus trees, sub-shrubs including Sigesbeckia orientalis L., the C4 grass species Paspalum vaginatum Sw., and extinct Pritchardia palms dominated the Vaifanaura'amo'ora wetland. This vegetation association is no longer present in the tropical oceanic Pacific islands. After 41.5 cal. kyr bp, the climate rapidly became drier and cooler with grasses, sedges and ferns dominating the vegetation. Algal sediment accumulation ceased after 38 cal. kyr bp due to prolonged dry climate conditions recorded across the Pacific Ocean. Sediment accumulation recommenced in the late Holocene. Main conclusions: The ecological responses identified from Tahiti provide evidence counter to the prevailing view that the tropical oceans buffered the ecological effects of abrupt climate changes during the last glacial period.
History
Journal
Journal of biogeographyVolume
43Issue
12Pagination
2438 - 2453Publisher
WileyLocation
Chichester, Eng.Publisher DOI
Link to full text
ISSN
0305-0270eISSN
1365-2699Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2016, WileyUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
climate changemultiproxy analysesPacific OceanPleistoceneprecession-forcingtropical oceanic islandsvegetation changeScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePhysical SciencesEcologyGeography, PhysicalEnvironmental Sciences & EcologyPhysical GeographyPOLLEN RECORDICE CORELASTISLANDSCALEBASINEXTINCTIONVEGETATIONGREENLANDDYNAMICS