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Paleovegetation dynamics in a montane vegetation mosaic in the Western Ghats, India: evidence for alternative stable states in the past?
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  • Prabhakaran Ramya Bala,
  • Sarath Pullyottum Kavil,
  • Ichiro Tayasu,
  • Chikage Yoshimizu,
  • Kaustubh Thirumalai,
  • Krishnan Sajeev,
  • Raman Sukumar
Prabhakaran Ramya Bala
University of Pennsylvania

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Sarath Pullyottum Kavil
Sorbonne University
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Ichiro Tayasu
Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
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Chikage Yoshimizu
Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
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Kaustubh Thirumalai
University of Arizona
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Krishnan Sajeev
Indian Institute of Science
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Raman Sukumar
Indian Institute of Science
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Abstract

Ecologists have proposed that montane grassland-shola (stunted evergreen forest) mosaics in the Western Ghats may represent alternative stable vegetation states. But paleoecology investigations seldom consider this framework, especially the role of short-term disturbances (fire, intense drought) other than long-term climatic changes, that can cause vegetation switches in landscapes with alternative vegetation states. The Sandynallah valley that hosts one of the oldest peat accumulations in the world at >50 kyr has been central to the reconstruction of paleovegetation in the montane Nilgiris, Western Ghats. Although the peat-forming vegetation here (dominated by sedges) is a unique vegetation state, its contribution to the paleovegetation signal has not been explicitly considered. We propose a conceptual framework of a tri-stability landscape with sedgeland on the valley floor, grassland on the hill slopes and shola vegetation in the boundary between sedgeland and grassland. While frost prevents shola saplings from establishing in grassland, waterlogging provides a barrier for their establishment in sedgeland, thus maintaining these distinct vegetation states under the same climate. We investigated the stable carbon isotope signatures of the cellulose fraction from two well-dated peat cores (Cores 1 and 2) collected from ~170m apart in the Sandynallah valley within the alternative stable states framework. We find that Core 1, which is closer to the boundary of valley and hill slope, shows dynamic switches between sedgeland and shola whereas Core 2, located in the centre of the valley floor, represents a stable sedgeland state. The vegetation switches and maintenance mechanisms at Core 1 is connected to a disturbance (fire) and to changing climate while Core 2 seems to be responding primarily to climatic changes. The simultaneously distinctive vegetation states in Cores 1 and 2 at such close proximity within the same valley is the first record of alternative stables states in the past in the Western Ghats.