Anthropogenic transitions from forested to human-dominated landscapes in southern Macaronesia
Abstract
Assessing the ecological consequences of human settlement can help preserve island forests and their ecosystem services, but to understand the legacy of these interactions requires datasets that span centuries. We used paleoecological data (e.g. fossil pollen) to show that prehuman Holocene forests were dynamic in response to climatic changes, and that human colonization led to increased incidence of fire, soil erosion, and grazing impacts in the Canary Islands and Cabo Verde. Humans have driven compositional convergence within the thermophilous woodland zone of Cabo Verde but in the Canary Islands relictual fragments of laurel forests persist. Our long-term view highlights the legacy of past human impacts and which tree species to restore and conserve in thermophilous woodlands within these biodiversity hotspots.
- Publication:
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
- Pub Date:
- October 2021
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2021PNAS..11822215C
- Keywords:
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- anthropogenic impacts;
- islands;
- Macaronesia;
- subtropical forests