High-resolution vegetation history of West Africa during the last 145 ka Auteur(s) : Dalibard, Mathieu Popescu, Speranta-maria Maley, Jean Baudin, Francois Melinte-dobrinescu, Mihaela-carmen Pittet, Bernard Marsset, Tania Dennielou, Bernard Éditeur(s) : Elsevier France-editions Scientifiques Medicales Elsevier Résumé : The essential characteristics of the vegetation dynamics of tropical Africa remain only partially known. This study assesses the succession of vegetation-types over Central Africa during the last two glacial/interglacial cycles. Analysis of core KZai 02, which contains pollen from the Zaire River watershed (latitudes 9°N-13°S), allows the investigation of long-term patterns of plant ecosystem development and their climatic causes. Core KZai 02 (18.20 m long) was recovered from 6°24.20′S/9°54.10′E in the uppermost axial edifice of the Zaire deep sea fan. The chronology of this sedimentary archive was established using nannofossils and correlations of pollen and total organic carbon signals with the nearby core GeoB1008. The pollen record indicates that: (i) glacials (MIS 6, 4, 2) are marked by the development of afromontane (Podocarpus) forest at high altitudes when central basin lowlands were occupied by Cyperaceae marshes and savannah; (ii) during interglacials (MIS 1, 5) lowland forests were developed, marked by the successive expansion of pioneer, warm-temperate, rain forests, and mangrove indicating sea-level rise; (iii) glacial-interglacial transitions (MIS 6/5, 2/1) display similar vegetation dynamics. The strong evidence of afromontane forest and the opening of the vegetation during glacials suggest a reduced latitudinal distribution of rainfall by the strengthening of the trade wind system. West African monsoon systems were enhanced during interglacials, allowing the progressive development of lowland forests. The development of rain and pioneer forests during glacial Heinrich stadials suggests an enhancement of water availability in tropical Africa associated with these high latitude events. However, no augmentation of wind activity, described by previous studies, is evidenced by our pollen record. Similar vegetation successions during glacial/interglacial transitions suggest the diachronous and stepped intervention of CO2 (emphasizing the influence of temperature on plant ecosystems) and water availability. Geobios (0016-6995) (Elsevier France-editions Scientifiques Medicales Elsevier), 2014-07 , Vol. 47 , N. 4 , P. 183-198 Droits : 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved. http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00199/31031/29436.pdf DOI:10.1016/j.geobios.2014.06.002 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00199/31031/ | Partager Voir aussi Central Africa Climate Environmental parameters Late Pleistocene Pollen Vegetation dynamics Télécharger |
Vegetation dynamics in southern France during the last 30 ky BP in the light of marine palynology Auteur(s) : Beaudouin, Célia Jouet, Gwenael Suc, Jean-pierre Berne, Serge Escarguela, Gilles Éditeur(s) : Elsevier Résumé : The composition of the glacial vegetation of southern French plains has been a matter of debate for several decades. Vegetation is considered as steppic according to French and Spanish lacustrine pollen records whereas cave deposits suggest the presence of mesothermophilous trees through the Last Glacial Maximum. In our paper, we display new palynological records from marine sediments of the Gulf of Lions. They indicate the presence of Abies, Picea and deciduous Quercus in the Gulf of Lions, certainly located in the drainage basins of the Pyreneo-Languedocian rivers. These populations that were sensitive to short climatic events during Marine Isotopic Stage 2 could have been linked to northeastern Spanish and southeastern French relicts already evidenced by phylogenetic data. These trees were absent from the Rhone drainage basin during the deglaciation and certainly also disappeared from the Pyreneo-Languedocian drainage basins from ca 17 to 15 ky cal BP. Finally, the Last Glacial Maximum does not appear as stable, cold and dry as previously thought. Quaternary Science Reviews (0277-3791) (Elsevier), 2007-04 , Vol. 26 , N. 7-8 , P. 1037-1054 Droits : 2007 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved. http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2007/publication-2804.pdf DOI:10.1016/j.quascirev.2006.12.009 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/2804/ | Partager |