The influence of abrupt climate change on the ice-age vegetation of the Central American lowlands
Autor
Correa-Metrio, Alexander
Bush, Mark B.
Hodell, David A.
Brenner, Mark
Escobar, Jaime
Guilderson, Tom
Institución
Resumen
Aim To investigate the effects of abrupt climate change in the North Atlantic on
the vegetation history of lowland Central America. We use palynological evidence
from a Central American lake on the Yucatan Peninsula to evaluate the effects of
rapid climate changes during the last ice age, between 65 and 8 ka.
Location Lake Pete´n-Itza´, lowlands of northern Guatemala.
Methods Sediment core PI-6 was sampled at c. 170-year resolution for pollen
and charcoal analysis in order to construct a temporal sequence of environmental
change. Uni- and multivariate statistical analyses were performed on the pollen
dataset to test whether there was an association between Heinrich events in the
North Atlantic and vegetation changes in the Central American lowlands.
Results Pollen analysis revealed that the composition of plant assemblages on
the Yucatan Peninsula varied in phase with rapid changes in North Atlantic
climate. Pine savannas were the main vegetation type between c. 60 and 47 ka.
These savannas gave way to pine–oak (Pinus–Quercus) forests in the latter half of
the last ice age. Marked episodes of replacement of the pine–oak assemblage by
xeric-tolerant taxa occurred during Heinrich events. The Last Glacial Maximum
(LGM) was characterized by mesic conditions.
Main conclusions The pollen record from Lake Pete´n-Itza´ showed that
vegetation changes associated with Heinrich events were more significant than
those associated with the LGM. Each Heinrich event produced a characteristic
shift towards xeric taxa. Although colder than Heinrich events, the LGM on the
Yucatan Peninsula was relatively moist, and the presumed savannization of the
landscape during the maximum cooling of the last glacial was not supported by
our data. Our findings suggest alternative scenarios for plant diversification and
genetic interchange during glacial times, and also indicate that vegetation in
tropical continental settings was not as stable as previously thought.