Abstract

Continental-scale estimates of vegetation cover, including land-surface properties and biogeographic trends, reflect the response of plant species to climate change over the past millennia. These estimates can help assess the effectiveness of simulations of climate change using forward and inverse modelling approaches. With the advent of transient and contiguous time-slice palaeoclimate simulations, vegetation datasets with similar temporal qualities are desirable. We collated fossil pollen records for the period 21,000–0 cal yr BP (kyr cal BP; calibrated ages) for Europe and Asia north of 40°N, using extant databases and new data; we filtered records for adequate dating and sorted the nomenclature to conform to a consistent yet extensive taxon list. From this database we extracted pollen spectra representing 1000-year time-slices from 21 kyr cal BP to present and used the biomization approach to define the most likely vegetation biome represented. Biomes were mapped for the 22 time slices, and key plant functional types (PFTs, the constituents of the biomes) were tracked though time. An error matrix and index of topographic complexity clearly showed that the accuracy of pollen-based biome assignments (when compared with modern vegetation) was negatively correlated with topographic complexity, but modern vegetation was nevertheless effectively mapped by the pollen, despite moderate levels of misclassification for most biomes. The pattern at 21 ka is of herb-dominated biomes across the whole region. From the onset of deglaciation (17–18 kyr cal BP), some sites in Europe record forest biomes, particularly the south, and the proportion of forest biomes gradually increases with time through 14 kyr cal BP. During the same period, forest biomes and steppe or tundra biomes are intermixed across the central Asian mountains, and forest biomes occur in coastal Pacific areas. These forest biome occurrences, plus a record of dated plant macrofossils, indicate that some tree populations existed in southern and Eastern Europe and central and far-eastern Eurasia. PFT composition of the herbaceous biomes emphasises the significant contribution of diverse forbs to treeless vegetation, a feature often obscured in pollen records. An increase in moisture ca. 14 kyr cal BP is suggested by a shift to woody biomes and an increase in sites recording initialization and development of lakes and peat deposits, particularly in the European portion of the region. Deforestation of Western Europe, presumably related to agricultural expansion, is clearly visible in the most recent two millennia.

Highlights

  • Northern Eurasia is a large landmass with distinct gradients in climate

  • Modern pollen biomes compared with modern vegetation

  • The four tundra biomes that occur along the Arctic coast and on high-arctic islands are moderately well reproduced by the pollen (Fig. 4a)

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Summary

Introduction

Northern Eurasia (north of ca. 40N and from 10W to 180E) is a large landmass with distinct gradients in climate. The last deglaciation led to dramatic changes to the Earth system, and in the North polar amplification likely enhanced regional responses to climate forcing (Serreze and Barry, 2011). The geography of Eurasia altered dramatically as the extensive shallow coastal shelves bordering the Arctic Ocean and the shallow Bering Strait region, which were subaerial for much of the last glacialinterglacial cycle, were flooded by eustatic sea-level rise. The biotic system saw major shifts in vegetation structure and composition (Andreev and Tarasov, 2013; Lozhkin and Anderson, 2013; Willerslev et al, 2014), continental-scale ecotones between forest and steppe and forest and tundra being sensitive recorders of climate change (e.g., Pielke and Vidale, 1995; Thompson et al, 2004; Williams et al, 2011). The late-Quaternary changes in Eurasian vegetation have not been comprehensively summarized and mapped using palaeodata

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