Abstract

Abstract Mangroves are a highly threatened ecosystem due to climate change and human activity, which increases coastal vulnerability. Knowledge about the ecological dynamics of mangroves on a centennial timescale can reveal the different responses in vegetation, which is useful for implementing basic actions for mangrove restoration, conservation and management. A mangrove ecosystem in the Cuyutlan Lagoon area along the Pacific coast of west-central Mexico is significantly altered as a result of industrialization, salt extraction, and road construction. The long-term dynamics of the mangrove ecosystem has also been controlled by Holocene climatic variability. This study reconstructs the environmental history of mangrove vegetation around the Cuyutlan Lagoon during the last ~1300 years in response to periods of human activity and climate change. The reconstruction was performed using paleoecological techniques in sediment cores that include the use of fossil pollen as a proxy for vegetation and magnetic susceptibility and geochemical data (determined by loss-on-ignition and X-ray fluorescence) as a proxy for past environmental changes. The chronology was determined using 14C dating and the age-depth model was constructed by linear interpolation. Redundancy analysis and non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) were used to discern patterns of distribution of the different proxies. Results revealed that the mangrove pollen assemblage of the Cuyutlan Lagoon was dominated by the arboreal taxa Rhizophora mangle, Euphorbiaceae, Moraceae and Pinaceae, herbaceous taxa like Poaceae, Chenopodiaceae/Amaranthaceae, and aquatics such as Typhaceae and Cyperaceae. NMDS showed a clear separation between two events of human activity—the Spanish Occupation of Colima (~AD 1523-1524) and the opening of the Manzanillo port (~AD 1824-1825). Climate change events such as the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) (~AD 800-1200) and the Little Ice Age (LIA) (~AD 1350-1850) were also successfully identified. The main responses were mangrove expansion (driven by R. mangle) during the LIA and the Manzanillo Port Opening, while the MCA was a highly perturbed period marked by multiple hurricane events and low or no pollen deposition in the sediment. During the Spanish Occupation, the aquatic taxa Typhaceae expanded together with an increase in Ca, Sr and carbonate contents.

Highlights

  • Mangrove forest, as an ecosystem that develops in the transition zone between marine and terrestrial ecosystems, is constantly subject to tidal variations

  • Radiocarbon dating of the core taken from the Cuyutlán Lagoon indicates that sediment accumulation began about 649–717 cal yr AD (Figure 2)

  • Samples representing the period of the Spanish Occupation of Colima (∼AD 1523-1524) and those representing the opening of the Manzanillo port (∼AD 18241825), including possibly the tsunami of 1932, are distinguishable from each other and from the rest of the core samples on axis 1

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Summary

Introduction

Mangrove forest, as an ecosystem that develops in the transition zone between marine and terrestrial ecosystems, is constantly subject to tidal variations. Due to this harsh environment with constant changes in temperature, water and salt, mangrove vegetation is robust and very adaptable. As a consequence this forest community presents high persistence and response to disturbance (Alongi, 2008). To better understand ecosystem history in the context of environmental change, it is of extreme importance to comprehend the human-climate disturbance interactions over varying scales of time and space. Climate change components that affect mangroves include changes in sea-level, hurricanes, storminess, precipitation, temperature, atmospheric CO2 concentration, ocean circulation patterns and health of functionally connected nearby ecosystems (McLeod and Salm, 2006; Gilman et al, 2008)

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