Abstract

Relationships between climate, species composition, and species richness are of particular importance for understanding how boreal ecosystems will respond to ongoing climate change. This study aims to reconstruct changes in terrestrial vegetation composition and taxa richness during the glacial Late Pleistocene and the interglacial Holocene in the sparsely studied southeastern Yakutia (Siberia) by using pollen and sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) records. Pollen and sedaDNA metabarcoding data using the trnL g and h markers were obtained from a sediment core from Lake Bolshoe Toko. Both proxies were used to reconstruct the vegetation composition, while metabarcoding data were also used to investigate changes in plant taxa richness. The combination of pollen and sedaDNA approaches allows a robust estimation of regional and local past terrestrial vegetation composition around Bolshoe Toko during the last ∼35,000 years. Both proxies suggest that during the Late Pleistocene, southeastern Siberia was covered by open steppe-tundra dominated by graminoids and forbs with patches of shrubs, confirming that steppe-tundra extended far south in Siberia. Both proxies show disturbance at the transition between the Late Pleistocene and the Holocene suggesting a period with scarce vegetation, changes in the hydrochemical conditions in the lake, and in sedimentation rates. Both proxies document drastic changes in vegetation composition in the early Holocene with an increased number of trees and shrubs and the appearance of new tree taxa in the lake’s vicinity. The sedaDNA method suggests that the Late Pleistocene steppe-tundra vegetation supported a higher number of terrestrial plant taxa than the forested Holocene. This could be explained, for example, by the “keystone herbivore” hypothesis, which suggests that Late Pleistocene megaherbivores were able to maintain a high plant diversity. This is discussed in the light of the data with the broadly accepted species-area hypothesis as steppe-tundra covered such an extensive area during the Late Pleistocene.

Highlights

  • Climate change affects species’ range dynamics, eventually resulting in certain biodiversity patterns in space and time (Thomas et al, 2004; Dawson et al, 2011)

  • Our study explores vegetation compositional changes inferred from both pollen and sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) analyses and richness changes inferred from sedaDNA analyses from a sediment core from Lake Bolshoe Toko located in southeastern Yakutia (Siberia)

  • The sample dated to 33,815 cal yr BP has the lowest similarity between the sedaDNA and pollen datasets

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change affects species’ range dynamics, eventually resulting in certain biodiversity patterns in space and time (Thomas et al, 2004; Dawson et al, 2011). Biodiversity in the northern ecosystems is expected to change at an exceptional pace under current global-warming processes. Models suggest a major switch in vegetation composition in the Northern Hemisphere during the 21st century in the course of warming and boreal forests are expected to advance into the tundra zone (Pearson et al, 2013; Kruse et al, 2016). Whether this northward migration will cause an increase or decrease in plant richness is not yet predicted

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