Long-term interactions between Mediterranean climate, vegetation and fire regime at Lago di Massaciuccoli (Tuscany, Italy)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2007
Abstract:
1
A Holocene sedimentary sequence from a coastal lake in the Mediterranean area
(Lago di Massaciuccoli, Tuscany, Italy, 0 m a.s.l.) was sampled for pollen and
microscopic charcoal analyses. Contiguous 1-cm samples represent an estimated time
interval of
c.
13 years, thus providing a high-resolution sequence from 6100 to 5400 cal.
years
??
.
2
Just before 6000 cal. years
??
, sub-Mediterranean and Mediterranean forests were
present together with fir (
Abies alba
), a submontane species that is today absent at low
altitudes in the Mediterranean. A sharp vegetational change occurred after 6000 cal.
years
??
involving a drastic decline of
Abies alba
around the site.
3
Time-series analyses suggest that increased fire activity at this time caused a strong
decline in
Abies alba
, a highly fire-sensitive species. During 100 years of higher fire
incidence, diverse (predominantly evergreen) forest communities were converted to
low-diversity fire-prone shrub communities.
4
Cross-correlations reveal that fire during the mid-Holocene hindered the expansion
of holm oak (
Quercus ilex
), the most common tree species today in Mediterranean environments.
While the factors that triggered the Holocene expansion of this species in the
Mediterranean area are unclear, our results do not support the hypothesis that fire was
key for holm oak expansion.
5
Diatom analyses of the same sediment core provide an independent palaeoenvironmental
proxy for palaeoclimatic reconstruction. A change in the eutrophy and salinity
of the lake occurred just before 6000 cal. years
??
, suggesting that a climatic shift towards
aridity may have triggered the observed change in hydrology and possibly also in fire
regime.
6
Over the millennia fire has decisively contributed to the establishment of the present
fire-adapted vegetation type (macchia). Native fire-sensitive species were displaced or
repressed, and arboreal vegetation became less diverse. Combined ecological and
palaeoecological data may help to assess possible future scenarios of biosphere
responses to global change. Our results imply that the forecasted global warming and
fire increase may trigger irrecoverable biodiversity losses and shifts in vegetational
composition within a few decades or centuries at most. In particular, fire and droughtsensitive
vegetation types, such as the relict forests of
Abies alba
in the Apennines, seem
particularly threatened by large-scale displacement.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Long-term interactions; Mediterranean climate; vegetation; fire regime; Massaciuccoli
Elenco autori:
Marchetto, Aldo
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: