首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Climate Cycles, Geomorphological Change, and the Interpretation of Soil and Ecosystem Development
Authors:Sara Hotchkiss  Peter M. Vitousek  Oliver A. Chadwick  Jonathan Price
Affiliation:(1) Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA; ,;(2) Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA;,;(3) Department of Geography, University of California–Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California 93106-4060, USA;,;(4) Graduate Group in Geography, University of California–Davis, Davis, California 95616, USA, US
Abstract:We evaluated changes in temperature and precipitation associated with climate change, subsidence, and erosion on a chronosequence of sites across Hawaii. The sites range in age from 0.3 to 4100 ky, and the current temperature and precipitation are similar at all sites. Interpretations of fossil pollen records suggest that cooler, dryer conditions prevailed in windward Hawaii during the last glacial period. If the previous glacial periods were similar, the 20-, 150-, and 1400-ky-old sites would have spent 60% or more of their development under relatively cool and dry conditions, whereas the 0.3- and 2.1-ky-old sites have experienced only the warmer, wetter climate of the present interglacial. Subsidence and erosion have also affected the temperature and precipitation of these sites over time; in the past, some of them have been in the dry air above the trade wind inversion or in the lee of larger mountains. Combining these components of change, we estimate that the average temperature over the history of Pleistocene-aged sites (20, 150, and 1400 ky) was up to 2.2°C cooler and that the average precipitation was only about 50% of current values. Under current conditions, it would take only 230 ky for as much water to leach through the 1400-ky-old site as we calculate has leached over 1400 ky. Incorporating more reasonable assumptions about environmental history has the potential to allow more powerful interpretations of chronosequence data and thereby improve the predictive potential of models of soil and ecosystem development. Received 21 December 1999; accepted 1 June 2000.
Keywords:: chronosequence   soil development   climate history   erosion   subsidence   Hawaii   ecosystem development   slow processes.
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号