Heat, hydroclimate and herbivory: A late-pleistocene record of environmental change from tropical western Africa
| Authors |
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|---|---|
| Publication date | 30-01-2025 |
| Journal | Quaternary International |
| Article number | 109636 |
| Volume | Issue number | 717 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
Fire shapes ecological dynamics across many regions of Africa today and
plays a critical role in the maintenance of grass dominated (savannah)
ecosystems in regions which could climatically support forest
vegetation, such as the Dahomey Gap in western Africa. However, the
importance of fire relative to other important factors (such as
herbivory and moisture availability) remains relatively poorly
quantified. Here we present new macrocharcoal data (particles
>160 μm) from Lake Bosumtwi (Ghana) spanning the last c. 50 thousand
years (ka). The macrocharcoal data are interpreted to provide evidence
of high biomass consuming fires within the lake catchment (c. 52 km2).
The macrocharcoal data are compared with previously published evidence
of regional fires (microcharcoal), vegetation (pollen), herbivory
(spores of coprophilous fungi), and moisture availability (δ 15N).
The macrocharcoal data suggest three phases of increased fire severity
(biomass consumption) during the last c. 50 ka: (i) 50–44 ka, (ii) 37–30
ka, and (iii) 26–10 ka. Covariance between high concentrations of
macrocharcoal and grass pollen during these periods suggests that grass
was likely providing most of the fuel load for the fires. After c. 10 ka
macrocharcoal disappears from the sediments, suggesting high severity
fires disappeared from the local landscape after this time. This decline
in fire follows a decrease in herbivory within the landscape and occurs
against a backdrop of increasing precipitation. We suggest that this
combination of factors resulted in the loss of fire and contributed to
the rise of a vegetation formation around Lake Bosumtwi during the
Holocene that was unlike any seen in the last c. 500 ka.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2024.109636 |
| Downloads |
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(Final published version)
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| Supplementary materials | |
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