Abstract

The pre-historical vegetation structure in temperate forest regions is much debated among European and North American ecologists and conservationists. Frans Vera's recent hypothesis that large mammals created mosaics of forest and openland vegetation in both regions throughout the Holocene has been particularly controversial and has provoked new approaches to conservation management. Thirty years earlier, American paleoecologists Herb Wright and Margaret Davis debated whether abundant ragweed pollen at Rogers Lake, Connecticut at 9500 yr BP signified local forest openings or long-distance transport of pollen from Midwestern prairies. Using new pollen records from Harvard Forest and the North American Pollen Database, we address this question and offer insights to the openland discussion. Ragweed and other forbs exceed 3.5% at five sites in a restricted area of southern New England between 10,100 and 7700 yr BP. Strong evidence suggests this pollen originated from the landscapes surrounding these sites (supporting Davis), as ragweed pollen percentages do not increase with longitude from New England to the Midwest. Ragweed pollen percentages are also unrelated to basin size and therefore unrelated to the proportion of extraregional pollen in New England. High forbs values were associated with increases in oak, decreases in white pine, and relatively high charcoal values. Modern pollen records with similar forb and tree percentages occur along the Prairie Peninsula region of the Upper Midwest. However, the closest analogue to the southern New England early Holocene assemblages comes from Massachusetts' Walden Pond in the early 18th century. These results and the affiliation of ragweed for open, disturbed habitats suggest that oak-pine forests with large openings persisted for over 2000 years due to dry conditions and perhaps increased fire frequency. This conclusion is corroborated by independent lake level and climate reconstructions. Because these early Holocene openlands have no detectable analogue in New England for the past 7000 years before European settlement, we suggest that all important openlands today are almost exclusively a legacy of Colonial agriculture and should be managed accordingly. Nonetheless, our results may have implications for forest dynamics accompanying projected climate change to more arid conditions in New England over the next century.

Highlights

  • To what extent have upland areas in temperate forest regions supported openland vegetation during historical and prehistorical times? This question has been long debated by ecologists, conservation biologists, and land managers

  • To interpret the early Holocene ragweed maximum at Rogers Lake, we examined paleoecological records from the Harvard Forest (HF) archives4 and the North American Pollen Database (NAPD; available online)5 for sites in New England, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana

  • If ragweed pollen originated in the Midwest, we would expect that: 1. Percentages would decrease with distance from Illinois, the closest area with abundant ragweed pollen (18%) during the early Holocene (King 1981).—This hypothesis was not confirmed; longitude is unrelated to maximum percentages of ragweed for the period 10 5007500 yr BP

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Summary

Introduction

To what extent have upland areas in temperate forest regions supported openland (i.e., nonforest, grass-, and shrub-dominated) vegetation during historical and prehistorical times? This question has been long debated by ecologists, conservation biologists, and land managers (cf. Askins 2000, Motzkin and Foster 2002, Svenning 2002).

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