The island of Mauritius offers the opportunity to study the poorly understood vegetation response to climate change on a small tropical oceanic island. A high-resolution pollen record from a 10 m long peat core from Kanaka Crater (560 m elevation, Mauritius, Indian Ocean) shows that vegetation shifted from a stable open wet forest Last Glacial state to a stable closed-stratified-tall-forest Holocene state. An ecological threshold was crossed at w11.5 cal ka BP, propelling the forest ecosystem into an unstable period lasting w4000 years. The shift between the two steady states involves a cascade of four abrupt (<150 years) forest transitions in which different tree species dominated the vegetation for a quasi-stable period of respectively ~1...
Relatively little is known of the long term environmental history of tropical south Pacificislands. ...
Aim: palaeoecological data provide an essential long-term perspective of ecological change and its d...
The tropical forests of Sulawesi represent some of the most diverse, biogeographically significant e...
A 10 m long peat core from the Kanaka Crater (20° 25′ S, 57° 31′ E), located at 560 m elevation in M...
Four centuries of human occupation has left Mauritius with <5% of its original vegetation cover. Con...
A 10 m long peat core from the Kanaka Crater (20 degrees 25' S, 57 degrees 31' E), located at 560 m ...
A 115 cm long sediment core retrieved from the exposed uplands of Mauritius, a small oceanic island ...
Aim: Coastal biodiversity hotspots are globally threatened by sea-level rise. As such it is importan...
Past climatic fluctuations have played a major role in shaping the current plant biodiversity. Altho...
International audienceMauritius, a 1,865 km2 oceanic island within the Madagascar and Indian Ocean i...
Easter Island is a paradigmatic example of human impact on ecosystems. The role of climate changes i...
Madagascar houses one of the Earth’s biologically richest, but also one of most endangered, terrestr...
Easter Island is a paradigmatic example of human impact on ecosystems. The role of climate changes i...
A multi-proxy reconstruction of a sediment core from the Tatos basin in the Mauritian lowlands revea...
Relatively little is known of the long term environmental history of tropical south Pacificislands. ...
Aim: palaeoecological data provide an essential long-term perspective of ecological change and its d...
The tropical forests of Sulawesi represent some of the most diverse, biogeographically significant e...
A 10 m long peat core from the Kanaka Crater (20° 25′ S, 57° 31′ E), located at 560 m elevation in M...
Four centuries of human occupation has left Mauritius with <5% of its original vegetation cover. Con...
A 10 m long peat core from the Kanaka Crater (20 degrees 25' S, 57 degrees 31' E), located at 560 m ...
A 115 cm long sediment core retrieved from the exposed uplands of Mauritius, a small oceanic island ...
Aim: Coastal biodiversity hotspots are globally threatened by sea-level rise. As such it is importan...
Past climatic fluctuations have played a major role in shaping the current plant biodiversity. Altho...
International audienceMauritius, a 1,865 km2 oceanic island within the Madagascar and Indian Ocean i...
Easter Island is a paradigmatic example of human impact on ecosystems. The role of climate changes i...
Madagascar houses one of the Earth’s biologically richest, but also one of most endangered, terrestr...
Easter Island is a paradigmatic example of human impact on ecosystems. The role of climate changes i...
A multi-proxy reconstruction of a sediment core from the Tatos basin in the Mauritian lowlands revea...
Relatively little is known of the long term environmental history of tropical south Pacificislands. ...
Aim: palaeoecological data provide an essential long-term perspective of ecological change and its d...
The tropical forests of Sulawesi represent some of the most diverse, biogeographically significant e...