Abstract
FUTURE greenhouse warming is expected to be particularly pronounced in boreal regions1, and consequent changes in vegetation in these regions may in turn affect global climate2–4. It is therefore important to establish how boreal ecosystems might respond to rapid changes in climate. Here we present palaeoecological evidence for changes in terrestrial vegetation and lake characteristics during an episode of climate warming that occurred between 5,000 and 4,000 years ago at the boreal treeline in central Canada. The initial transformation — from tundra to forest-tundra on land, which coincided with increases in lake productivity, pH and ratio of inflow to evaporation — took only 150 years, which is roughly equivalent to the time period often used in modelling the response of boreal forests to climate warming5,6. The timing of the treeline advance did not coincide with the maximum in high-latitude summer insolation predicted by Milankovitch theory7, suggesting that northern Canada experienced regionally asynchronous middle-to-late Holocene shifts in the summer position of the Arctic front. Such Holocene climate events may provide a better analogue for the impact of future global change on northern ecosystems than the transition from glacial to nonglacial conditions.
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MacDonald, G., Edwards, T., Moser, K. et al. Rapid response of treeline vegetation and lakes to past climate warming. Nature 361, 243–246 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1038/361243a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/361243a0
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