Floristic diversity and its relationships with human land use varied regionally during the Holocene

Bibliographic Collection: 
APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Gordon, Jonathan D.; Fagan, Brennen; Milner, Nicky; Thomas, Chris D.
Year of Publication: 2024
Journal: Nature Ecology & Evolution
Date Published: 2024/07/08
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 2397-334X
Abstract:

Humans have caused growing levels of ecosystem and diversity changes at a global scale in recent centuries but longer-term diversity trends and how they are affected by human impacts are less well understood. Analysing data from 64,305 pollen samples from 1,763 pollen records revealed substantial community changes (turnover) and reductions in diversity (richness and evenness) in the first ~1,500 to ~4,000 years of the Holocene epoch (starting 11,700 years ago). Turnover and diversity generally increased thereafter, starting ~6,000 to ~1,000 years ago, although the timings, magnitudes and even directions of these changes varied among continents, biomes and sites. Here, modelling these diversity changes, we find that most metrics of biodiversity change are associated with human impacts (anthropogenic land-cover change estimates for the last 8,000 years), often positively but the magnitudes, timings and sometimes directions of associations differed among continents and biomes and sites also varied. Once-forested parts of the world tended to exhibit biodiversity increases while open areas tended to decline. These regionally specific relationships between humans and floristic diversity highlight that human–biodiversity relationships have generated positive diversity responses in some locations and negative responses in others, for over 8,000 years.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-024-02457-x
Short Title: Nature Ecology & Evolution
Export: