Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Holocene land-cover changes on the Tibetan Plateau
View through CrossRef
Information on changes in land-surface features on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) during the Holocene may help our understanding of the forcing of monsoonal circulation. We analyse vegetation changes during the last 9000 years from pollen records of four lakes (Hurleg Lake in the Qaidam Basin; Qinghai Lake on the northeastern TP; Zigetang Lake on the central TP and Koucha Lake on the eastern TP) which represent different regions and vegetation types on the Plateau today. A set of modern pollen assemblages from 111 lake sediment samples originating from different vegetation types is used for the interpretation of the Holocene pollen records. Four types of numerical analyses are used to infer different aspects of pollen-stratigraphical and inferred vegetation changes: biome reconstruction; ordination (to infer palynological compositional turnover); rate-of-assemblage-change analysis, and a pollen-LAI (leaf area index) transfer function. Our results show strong regional differences in inferred vegetation change in terms of timing, strength and the nature of change. The greatest changes in compositional turnover and LAI are found in the Qinghai Lake record, indicating that forests were replaced by steppe vegetation in a step-wise fashion since the mid Holocene. Alpine steppe vegetation on the central and eastern TP was relatively stable throughout the Holocene, only showing a gradual replacement of temperate steppe by high-alpine meadows. The Qaidam Basin was dominated by temperate desert throughout the Holocene. The documented palynological and inferred vegetation changes can be most parsimoniously explained by climate change, although human impacts cannot be excluded as a contributing factor. Comparison of our findings with sensitivity analyses of numerical climate simulations suggests that long-term vegetation change may have had only a weak influence on regional climate change on the Tibetan Plateau.
SAGE Publications
Title: Holocene land-cover changes on the Tibetan Plateau
Description:
Information on changes in land-surface features on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) during the Holocene may help our understanding of the forcing of monsoonal circulation.
We analyse vegetation changes during the last 9000 years from pollen records of four lakes (Hurleg Lake in the Qaidam Basin; Qinghai Lake on the northeastern TP; Zigetang Lake on the central TP and Koucha Lake on the eastern TP) which represent different regions and vegetation types on the Plateau today.
A set of modern pollen assemblages from 111 lake sediment samples originating from different vegetation types is used for the interpretation of the Holocene pollen records.
Four types of numerical analyses are used to infer different aspects of pollen-stratigraphical and inferred vegetation changes: biome reconstruction; ordination (to infer palynological compositional turnover); rate-of-assemblage-change analysis, and a pollen-LAI (leaf area index) transfer function.
Our results show strong regional differences in inferred vegetation change in terms of timing, strength and the nature of change.
The greatest changes in compositional turnover and LAI are found in the Qinghai Lake record, indicating that forests were replaced by steppe vegetation in a step-wise fashion since the mid Holocene.
Alpine steppe vegetation on the central and eastern TP was relatively stable throughout the Holocene, only showing a gradual replacement of temperate steppe by high-alpine meadows.
The Qaidam Basin was dominated by temperate desert throughout the Holocene.
The documented palynological and inferred vegetation changes can be most parsimoniously explained by climate change, although human impacts cannot be excluded as a contributing factor.
Comparison of our findings with sensitivity analyses of numerical climate simulations suggests that long-term vegetation change may have had only a weak influence on regional climate change on the Tibetan Plateau.
Related Results
The Complex and Well-Developed Morphological and Histological Structures of the Gastrointestinal Tract of the Plateau Zokor Improve Its Digestive Adaptability to High-Fiber Foods
The Complex and Well-Developed Morphological and Histological Structures of the Gastrointestinal Tract of the Plateau Zokor Improve Its Digestive Adaptability to High-Fiber Foods
The morphological and histological traits of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) enable the animal to perform some specific functions that enhance the species’ adaptability to environ...
Observational studies of water surface Evaporation on inland lake over the classical Tibetan Plateau
Observational studies of water surface Evaporation on inland lake over the classical Tibetan Plateau
To understand how the changing process of lake water level and area in Tibetan Plateau effects on the dynamic process of water resources in the surrounding area is very important. ...
Responses of Tibetan antelope population to environment changes during the Holocene
Responses of Tibetan antelope population to environment changes during the Holocene
Tibetan antelope (Chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii), an endemic species of the Tibet Plateau, inhabits the open alpine and desert steppe areas ranging 3250 to 5500 m altitude. In the pa...
Formation of the Yalong Downstream Terraces in the SE Tibetan Plateau and Its Implication for the Uplift of the Plateau
Formation of the Yalong Downstream Terraces in the SE Tibetan Plateau and Its Implication for the Uplift of the Plateau
AbstractThe Yalong River is an important river that runs across the abruptly changing terrain of the SE Tibetan Plateau. The terraces and Quaternary sediments in its valleys preser...
Late Holocene Wetland Environmental Changes and Their Climatic Drivers in the Marginal Regions of the Tibetan Plateau
Late Holocene Wetland Environmental Changes and Their Climatic Drivers in the Marginal Regions of the Tibetan Plateau
Abstract. This study investigates the dynamics and driving mechanisms of wetland environment changes in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau, focusing on the expansion and contraction ...
Belowground biomass of alpine shrublands across the northeast Tibetan Plateau
Belowground biomass of alpine shrublands across the northeast Tibetan Plateau
AbstractAlthough belowground biomass (BGB) plays an important role in global cycling, the storage of BGB and climatic effects on it are remaining unclear. With data from 49 sites, ...
Definition of the Quaternary Qiangtang Paleolake in Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau, China
Definition of the Quaternary Qiangtang Paleolake in Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau, China
Abstract:Since the Quaternary, many lakes have been present in the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau. As peculiar geological processes in the evolution of the uplifting of Qinghai‐Tibetan Pl...
High-Precision Vertical Movement of the Tibetan Plateau
High-Precision Vertical Movement of the Tibetan Plateau
Quantitative and high-precision vertical movements are indispensable for resolving the geological diversity of the Tibetan Plateau. In this study, we proposed a joint geodetic adju...


