Abstract

Abstract. Atmospheric CO2 concentration is hypothesized to influence vegetation distribution via tree–grass competition, with higher CO2 concentrations favouring trees. The stable carbon isotope (δ13C) signature of vegetation is influenced by the relative importance of C4 plants (including most tropical grasses) and C3 plants (including nearly all trees), and the degree of stomatal closure – a response to aridity – in C3 plants. Compound-specific δ13C analyses of leaf-wax biomarkers in sediment cores of an offshore South Atlantic transect are used here as a record of vegetation changes in subequatorial Africa. These data suggest a large increase in C3 relative to C4 plant dominance after the Last Glacial Maximum. Using a process-based biogeography model that explicitly simulates 13C discrimination, it is shown that precipitation and temperature changes cannot explain the observed shift in δ13C values. The physiological effect of increasing CO2 concentration is decisive, altering the C3/C4 balance and bringing the simulated and observed δ13C values into line. It is concluded that CO2 concentration itself was a key agent of vegetation change in tropical southern Africa during the last glacial–interglacial transition. Two additional inferences follow. First, long-term variations in terrestrial δ13Cvalues are not simply a proxy for regional rainfall, as has sometimes been assumed. Although precipitation and temperature changes have had major effects on vegetation in many regions of the world during the period between the Last Glacial Maximum and recent times, CO2 effects must also be taken into account, especially when reconstructing changes in climate between glacial and interglacial states. Second, rising CO2 concentration today is likely to be influencing tree–grass competition in a similar way, and thus contributing to the "woody thickening" observed in savannas worldwide. This second inference points to the importance of experiments to determine how vegetation composition in savannas is likely to be influenced by the continuing rise of CO2 concentration.

Highlights

  • The effects of changes in atmospheric CO2 concentration on vegetation composition and biome distribution have received relatively little attention, compared with its effects on primary productivity

  • The MH simulations are close to the pre-industrial Holocene (PI) simulation, indicating that the simulated Holocene vegetation changes in this region were relatively minor compared to those between Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and Holocene

  • 4 Discussion These results show that the glacial–interglacial climate change, as simulated by the range of Palaeoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project (PMIP) models, qualitatively cannot account for observed stable carbon isotope and vegetation changes in tropical southern Africa

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Summary

Introduction

The effects of changes in atmospheric CO2 concentration on vegetation composition and biome distribution have received relatively little attention, compared with its effects on primary productivity Rising CO2 has been suggested as one potential cause of “woody thickening”. The large (∼ 100 ppm) increase in CO2 concentration over the last glacial–interglacial transition has been proposed as a major cause of the increase in global forest cover shown by pollen records (Street-Perrott et al, 1997; Jolly and Haxeltine, 1997; Cowling, 1999; Cowling and Sykes, 1999; Bond et al, 2003; Harrison and Prentice, 2003; Cowling and Shin, 2006)

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