Effects of atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> variability of the past 800&thinsp;kyr on the biomes of southeast Africa
Language
EN
Article de revue
This item was published in
Climate of the Past. 2019, vol. 15, n° 3, p. 1083-1097
English Abstract
Very little is known about the impact of atmospheric carbon dioxide pressure (pCO 2) on the shaping of biomes. The development of pCO 2 throughout the Brun-hes Chron may be considered a natural experiment to elucidate ...Read more >
Very little is known about the impact of atmospheric carbon dioxide pressure (pCO 2) on the shaping of biomes. The development of pCO 2 throughout the Brun-hes Chron may be considered a natural experiment to elucidate relationships between vegetation and pCO 2. While the glacial periods show low to very low values (∼ 220 to ∼ 190 ppmv, respectively), the pCO 2 levels of the interglacial periods vary from intermediate to relatively high (∼ 250 to more than 270 ppmv, respectively). To study the influence of pCO 2 on the Pleistocene development of SE African vegetation , we used the pollen record of a marine core (MD96-2048) retrieved from Delagoa Bight south of the Limpopo River mouth in combination with stable isotopes and geo-chemical proxies. Applying endmember analysis, four pollen assemblages could be distinguished representing different biomes: heathland, mountain forest, shrubland and woodland. We find that the vegetation of the Limpopo River catchment and the coastal region of southern Mozambique is influenced not only by hydroclimate but also by temperature and atmospheric pCO 2. Our results suggest that the extension of mountain forest occurred during those parts of the glacials when pCO 2 and temperatures were moderate and that only during the colder periods when atmospheric pCO 2 was low (less than 220 ppmv) open ericaceous vegetation including C 4 sedges extended. The main development of woodlands in the area took place after the Mid-Brunhes Event (∼ 430 ka) when interglacial pCO 2 levels regularly rose over 270 ppmv.Read less <