The role of short-term disturbances in paleovegetation dynamics in a
montane forest-grassland vegetation mosaic, Western Ghats, India
Abstract
The Sandynallah valley (Western Ghats, India) features one of the oldest
peat accumulations in the world at >50 kyr and has been
central to the reconstruction of late Quaternary paleoclimate using
paleovegetation changes in the forest-grassland vegetation mosaic that
coexist here. It is well-known that short-term disturbances (fire,
frost, intense drought) can also cause vegetation switches when multiple
stable states exist, but this framework has seldom been considered in
paleoecology investigations. Using stable carbon isotope signatures
(relative C3-C4 vegetation abundance) on the cellulose fraction from two
well-dated peat cores ~170 m apart - Core 1 closer to
the hillslope (32000 years old) and Core 2 from the centre of the valley
floor (45,000 years old) - we looked at paleovegetation changes and the
implications for paleoclimate reconstruction within the alternative
stable states framework. Charcoal data from another sediment profile
from the same valley was used to correlate with paleofires. We propose
that the valley floor is bistable, switching between peat-forming
vegetation ‘sedgeland’ and montane stunted evergreen forest ‘shola’,
maintained by level of waterlogging. Core 1 shows shola-sedgeland
dynamics with vegetation switching at c.22ka from shola (possibly due to
fires) to a prolonged unstable state until 13 ka sustained by low
waterlogging. Following a hiatus c.13-7 ka, sedgeland dominates, with a
shift into shola at 3.75 ka driven by increasing aridity. Core 2 shows a
relatively stable signature, enriched in C3-vegetation in the last
glacial (45-20 ka) compared to the Holocene. Given temperature is the
primary driver of abundance in C3-C4 mixed-grasslands, C4 dominance
beginning c.18.5 ka followed by C4 enrichment is indicative of deglacial
warming that continues into the Holocene except for a departure at
~10 ka. The record at Core 2 is indicative of changing
climate while Core 1 shows disturbance-based vegetation dynamics. The
simultaneously distinctive vegetation states in Cores 1 and 2 within the
same valley is the first record of alternative stable states in the past
in the montane tropics. Our results point to the need to account for
short-term disturbances and site attributes before ascribing vegetation
changes to changing climate in alternative stable states landscapes.