The influence of climatic change, fire and species invasion on a Tasmanian temperate rainforest system over the past 18,000 years

2021 ◽  
Vol 260 ◽  
pp. 106824
Author(s):  
Fletcher Michael-Shawn ◽  
Bowman David MJS ◽  
Whitlock Cathy ◽  
Mariani Michela ◽  
Beck Kristen K ◽  
...  

In the last year or two there has been a remarkable increase in the interest, both popular and scientific, in the subject of climatic change. This stems from a recognition that even a highly technological society is vulnerable to the effects of climatic fluctuations and indeed may become more so, as margins of surplus food production are reduced, and nations become more interdependent for their food supply. In this respect our concern is with quite small changes - a degree (Celsius) or less in temperature and 10 % or so in rainfall. Probably we may discount some of the more alarmist suggestions of an imminent and rapid change towards near glacial conditions as these are based on very sketchy evidence. However, whatever the time-scale of climatic fluctuations with which we are concerned, we may hope to learn a great deal which is relevant to the factors which will control our future climate from the study of its more extreme vagaries in the past. Information relevant to the weather in such extreme periods is coming forward in increasing detail and volume from a wide range of disciplines. The variety of the evidence, its lack of precision as a strict measure of climate, and the number of different sources all make it difficult for an individual to build up a clear picture of past climates. However such a picture is needed, if explanations and interpretation are to be possible. Ideally one would need a synchronous picture of the climate of the whole world at selected epochs in the past. Various international programmes are directed to forming such pictures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 93 (5) ◽  
pp. 675-684
Author(s):  
Nicolas Latte ◽  
Philippe Taverniers ◽  
Tanguy de Jaegere ◽  
Hugues Claessens

Abstract To increase forest resilience to global change, forest managers are often directing forest stands towards a broader diversity of tree species. The small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata Mill.), a rare and scattered species in northwestern Europe, is a promising candidate for this purpose. Its life traits suggest a high resilience to climate change and a favourable impact on forest ecosystem services. This study used a dendroecological approach to assess how lime tree radial growth had responded to the past climatic change. First, 120 lime trees from nine sites were selected in southern Belgium based on criteria adapted to the rareness of the species. Chronology quality was assessed and resulting tree-ring series were validated at site and region levels. Second, a range of dendrochronological methods was used to analyze the changes over time in the variability and long-term trends of lime tree growth and their relation to climate during the period 1955–2016. Last, behaviour of lime trees was compared with that of beech from the same region and time period. For this purpose, the same methodology was applied to an additional beech tree-ring dataset (149 trees from 13 sites). Beech is the climax tree species of the region, but is known to be drought-sensitive and has shown weaknesses in the current climate. The quality of our tree-ring series attests that dendroecological investigation using rare and scattered species is possible, opening the way to further analysis on other such lesser-known forest tree species. The analysis showed that the small-leaved lime had been resilient to the past climatic change in multiple ways. Lime growth increased during the preceding decades despite an increased frequency and intensity of stressful climatic events. Lime growth quickly recovered in the years following the stresses. The growth–climate relationships were either stable over time or had a positive evolution. The behaviour of lime contrasted strongly with that of beech. Lime performed better than beech in every analysis. Small-leaved lime is thus a serious candidate for addressing climate change challenges in the region. It should be considered by forest managers planning to improve the sustainability and resilience of their forests, in particular in vulnerable beech stands.


1988 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reid A. Bryson

Research over the past century has shown that the rates and magnitudes of climatic change constitute a continuum. Changes have now been identified in the climatic record that range in duration from interannual through decades and centuries to the multi-millennial time-scale. Examples range from the drought years of the 1930 and 1970 decades to the ponderous comings and goings of the ice-ages. More recently it has become clear that some changes can be quite rapid. In recent decades great progress has been made in identifying the causes of climatic variation.The present understanding of the causes of climatic change emphasizes continental drift (or ‘plate tectonics’) at the million-years' scale, with pulses of plate movement producing significant bursts of volcanic activity that may act on the millennial or century scale. At the multi-millennial scale there is growing agreement that the variations in irradiance of the Earth, resulting from slow changes in the Sun-Earth geometry (the so-called Milankovitch variations), exercise the operative control on the timing of ice-ages and interglacials. At the decadal and interannual scales there is less agreement; but there is at least a body of research which suggests that significant volcanic activity is a contributing factor. There is considerable agreement—but little direct evidence—that anthropogenic causes such as increased carbon dioxide and other Man-made or-enhanced trace gases in the atmosphere, will be important in the coming decades.Cultural responses might be expected to differ across this continuum. To assess the expected response to a climatic variation, one must know at least the shape of the response surface.There is probably a critical threshold combination of climatic change magnitude and duration. Human cultures seem to be adapted to frequently-occurring short ‘aberrations’ from the expected climate. Some evidence indicates, on the other hand, that relatively small changes of climates (of the order of a century in duration) have been associated over the past 8,000 years with cultural changes that proved large enough to lead to different names being assigned in perhaps half of the cultural termini identified. A climate model which includes the effect of volcanic aerosols, suggests that most of the climatic changes associated with these globally synchronous cultural termini are related to peaks of volcanic activity. Some apparently catastrophic events have been recognized in this connection.There remains the problem of assessing, in realistic terms, the impact of large-magnitude climatic variations on modern human societies. Of particular concern is the effect of climatic events associated with very large-scale short-term insertions of aerosols into the atmosphere. It is likely that non-equilibrium models of the atmosphere, with specified sea-surface temperatures, would give realistic results if refined to the degree that they could replicate events of lesser magnitude which have occurred in the past century. At present there appear to be no models in which the formulation of the radiative effect of aerosols or gases gives a good match with observed radiative effects. It seems that much more research, including field experiments, will be needed if science is to supply reliable advice to society on the nature of coming climatic changes.


There have been two threads running through this Symposium: the interpretation of observations and the discussion of mechanisms. Nearly all the speakers concerned with the evidence derived from the comparison of the continents and from palaeomagnetism have interpreted their results in terms of movement of the continents. It is difficult not to be impressed by this agreement of many lines of study leading to compatible conclusions, though there have been some dissenting views. The most troublesome differences of opinion about the interpretation of the facts relate to the distribution of plants and animals in the past. Perhaps it is not surprising that there should be differences here; the fossil record is incomplete both in time and in space and, if one believes that arbitrarily great changes of climate may have occurred in the past and perhaps also that the Earth’s poles may have shifted, there is not much information left to determine whether the continents have moved relative to each other or not. For example there are Carboniferous evaporites in Spitzbergen and Permian evaporites in Greenland where they are not forming today. Conditions in the past must have been different from those of the present, but if one asks whether such different conditions existed in a belt running all round the pole in the latitude of Spitzbergen, and thus indicate a general change in climate, one cannot tell, because most of the area is occupied by Precambrian shields. Climatic change, continental movement and shifts of the pole, are all possible explanations.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. e0171967 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi-Feng Yao ◽  
Xiao-Yan Song ◽  
Alexandra H. Wortley ◽  
Yu-Fei Wang ◽  
Stephen Blackmore ◽  
...  

Nature ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 246 (5433) ◽  
pp. 375-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G.
Keyword(s):  

1997 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 923-934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peijun Shi ◽  
Jing'ai Wang ◽  
Yun Xie ◽  
Ping Wang ◽  
Wuguang Zhou

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nafiz Maden

Abstract. In this paper, it is reviewed the relationships between the aurora observations, past solar activity and climatic change in Anatolia during medieval period. For this purpose, it is presented two historical aurora catalogs for Anatolia and Middle East regions at various dates in order to understand the past solar activity and possible physical mechanism using historical texts, chronicles and other auroral records. The available catalogs in literature are covered records observed in the Europe, Japan, China, Russia and Middle East. There is no study dealing only with the historical aurora observations recorded in Anatolia. The data of the catalog strongly support that there is a considerable relationship between the aurora activity and past strong solar activity. An unusually high auroral activity during the years around 1100 in Anatolia and Middle East is quite consistent with the past solar variability, geomagnetic field intensity and planetary climatic changes drastically impacting on the economy and human events.


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