Literature DB >> 24024911

Use of pollen and ancient DNA as conservation baselines for offshore islands in New Zealand.

Janet M Wilmshurst1, Neville T Moar, Jamie R Wood, Peter J Bellingham, Amy M Findlater, James J Robinson, Clive Stone.   

Abstract

Islands play a key role globally in the conservation of endemic species. Many island reserves have been highly modified since human colonization, and their restoration and management usually occur without knowledge of their prehuman state. However, conservation paleoecology is increasingly being recognized as a tool that can help to inform both restoration and conservation of island reserves by providing prehuman vegetation baselines. Many of New Zealand's mammal-free offshore islands are foci for biological diversity conservation and, like many islands in the Polynesian region, were deforested following initial human settlement. Therefore, their current restoration, replanting, and management are guided either by historic vegetation descriptions or the occurrence of species on forested islands. We analyzed pollen and ancient DNA in soil cores from an offshore island in northern New Zealand. The result was a 2000-year record of vegetation change that began >1200 years before human settlement and spanned 550 years of human occupation and 180 years of forest succession since human occupation ceased. Between prehuman and contemporary forests there was nearly a complete species turnover including the extirpation of a dominant conifer and a palm tree. The podocarp-dominated forests were replaced by a native but novel angiosperm-dominated forest. There is no modern analog of the prehuman forests on any northern New Zealand island, and those islands that are forested are dominated by angiosperms which are assumed to be climax forests. The pollen and DNA evidence for conifer- and palm-rich forests in the prehuman era challenge this climax forest assumption. Prehuman vegetation records can thus help to inform future restoration of degraded offshore islands by informing the likely rate and direction of successional change; helping to determine whether natural rates of succession are preferable to more costly replanting programs; and providing past species lists if restoration replanting is desired.
© 2013 Society for Conservation Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dacrydium; Rhopalostylis; conservation paleoecology; deforestación; deforestation; extinciones; extinctions; island restoration; paleoecología de conservación; pollen record; prehuman; prehumano; registro de polen; restauración de islas

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24024911     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12150

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  10 in total

1.  Proxy comparison in ancient peat sediments: pollen, macrofossil and plant DNA.

Authors:  Laura Parducci; Minna Väliranta; J Sakari Salonen; Tiina Ronkainen; Irina Matetovici; Sonia L Fontana; Tiina Eskola; Pertti Sarala; Yoshihisa Suyama
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-01-19       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  An avian seed dispersal paradox: New Zealand's extinct megafaunal birds did not disperse large seeds.

Authors:  Joanna K Carpenter; Jamie R Wood; Janet M Wilmshurst; Dave Kelly
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2018-04-25       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Paleoecology reveals lost ecological connections and strengthens ecosystem restoration.

Authors:  Lindsey Gillson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 12.779

Review 4.  Mobilizing the past to shape a better Anthropocene.

Authors:  Nicole Boivin; Alison Crowther
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-01-18       Impact factor: 15.460

5.  Algorithms and strategies in short-read shotgun metagenomic reconstruction of plant communities.

Authors:  Robert S Harbert
Journal:  Appl Plant Sci       Date:  2018-04-06       Impact factor: 1.936

6.  Plant DNA metabarcoding of lake sediments: How does it represent the contemporary vegetation.

Authors:  Inger Greve Alsos; Youri Lammers; Nigel Giles Yoccoz; Tina Jørgensen; Per Sjögren; Ludovic Gielly; Mary E Edwards
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-17       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Early tropical crop production in marginal subtropical and temperate Polynesia.

Authors:  Matthew Prebble; Atholl J Anderson; Paul Augustinus; Joshua Emmitt; Stewart J Fallon; Louise L Furey; Simon J Holdaway; Alex Jorgensen; Thegn N Ladefoged; Peter J Matthews; Jean-Yves Meyer; Rebecca Phillipps; Rod Wallace; Nicholas Porch
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-04-08       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 8.  Severe Insect Pest Impacts on New Zealand Pasture: The Plight of an Ecological Outlier.

Authors:  Stephen L Goldson; Gary M Barker; Hazel M Chapman; Alison J Popay; Alan V Stewart; John R Caradus; Barbara I P Barratt
Journal:  J Insect Sci       Date:  2020-03-01       Impact factor: 1.857

9.  Potential for cascading impacts of environmental change and policy on indigenous culture.

Authors:  Johanna Yletyinen; Jason M Tylianakis; Clive Stone; Phil O'B Lyver
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2022-01-15       Impact factor: 5.129

Review 10.  A Critical Assessment of the Congruency between Environmental DNA and Palaeoecology for the Biodiversity Monitoring and Palaeoenvironmental Reconstruction.

Authors:  Shahnawaz Hassan; Zulaykha Khurshid; Bikram Singh Bali; Bashir Ah Ganai; R Z Sayyed; Peter Poczai; Muzafar Zaman
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-08-01       Impact factor: 4.614

  10 in total

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