10 research outputs found
Climate and environment on the Karelian Isthmus, northwestern Russia, 13000-9000 cal. yrs BP
Sediment sequences retrieved from Lake Medvedevskoye (60degrees13'N 29degrees54'E) and Lake Pastorskoye (60degrees13'N, 30degrees02'E). Karelian Isthmus, northwestern Russia, were analysed for lithology, pollen and diatom stratigraphy, total organic carbon content and mineral magnetic parameters. Age control for both sequences was provided by AMS C-14 measurements and the Vedde Ash tephra. The reconstructed climatic and environmental development shows the deglaciation of the sites a-ad the establishment of sparse shrub and herb/grass vegetation before 12650 cal. yrs BP ('Allerod'; GI-1a). Steppe tundra and cold, dry conditions prevailed until about 11000 cal. yrs BP. i.e. throughout the 'Younger Dryas' (GS-1) and the earliest Holocene. The establishment of open Picea-Pinus-Betula forest around the lakes at about 11000 cal. yrs BP coincides with the first distinct change towards gradually warmer and more humid climatic conditions. Boreal forest with Picea, Pinus, Betula, Alnus incana and Corylus was present at the lower altitude site between c. 10700 and 10200 cal. yrs BP. while open Betula-Pinus forest continued to dominate the vegetation around the higher altitude site. After a short, possibly colder, phase around 10200-10000 cal. yrs BP, which is expressed by a marked reduction in vegetation Cover and decreased lake productivity. Climatic conditions became significantly warmer and possibly more humid. Boreal forest with Pinus, Betula, Picea, Alnus incana, Con-his and Ulmus became widespread in the region after 10000 cal. yrs BP, The delayed environmental response of the lakes and their catchment to hemispheric warming at the Pleistocene/Holocene boundary may be explained by a sustained blocking of westerly air masses due to the presence of the Scandinavian ice sheet and associated strengthened easterlies and anticyclonic circulation and/or extensive permafrost
Long-term forest composition and its drivers in taiga forests in NW Russia
Understanding the processes behind long-term
boreal forest dynamics can provide information that assists
in predicting future boreal vegetation under changing
environmental conditions. Here, we examine Holocene
stand-scale vegetation dynamics and its drivers at the
western boundary of the Russian taiga forest in NW Russia.
Fossil pollen and conifer stomata records from four small
hollow sites and two lake sites are used to reconstruct local
vegetation dynamics during the Holocene. Variation partitioning
is used to assess the relative importance of the
potential drivers (temperature, forest fires and growing site
wetness) to the long-term stand-scale dynamics in taiga
forest. All the main tree taxa, including the boreal keystone
species Picea abies (Norway spruce) and Larix sibirica
(Siberian larch), have been locally present since 10,000 cal
yr BP. The constant Holocene presence of L. sibirica at
three small hollow sites suggests a fast postglacial immigration
of the species in northern Europe. Picea was present
but not dominant at all study sites until its expansion
between 8,000 and 7,000 cal yr BP markedly changed the
forest structure through the suppression of Betula (birch),
Pinus (pine) and Larix. Our results demonstrate that in
general, the Holocene forest dynamics in our study region
have been driven by temperature, but during short intervals
the role of local factors, especially forest fires, has been
prominent. The comparison between sites reveals the
importance of local factors in stand-scale dynamics in taiga
forests. Therefore, the future responses of taiga forest to
climate change will be predominantly modulated by the
local characteristics at the site