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Long‐term variability and rainfall control of savanna fire regimes in equatorial East Africa
Authors:David M Nelson  Dirk Verschuren  Michael A Urban  Feng Sheng Hu
Institution:1. Appalachian Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, , Frostburg, MD, USA;2. Limnology Unit, Department of Biology, Ghent University, , B‐9000 Gent, Belgium;3. Program in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation, University of Illinois, , Urbana, IL, USA;4. Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois, , Urbana, IL, USA;5. Department of Geology, University of Illinois, , Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract:Fires burning the vast grasslands and savannas of Africa significantly influence the global carbon cycle. Projecting the impacts of future climate change on fire‐mediated biogeochemical processes in these dry tropical ecosystems requires understanding of how various climate factors influence regional fire regimes. To examine climate–vegetation–fire linkages in dry savanna, we conducted macroscopic and microscopic charcoal analysis on the sediments of the past 25 000 years from Lake Challa, a deep crater lake in equatorial East Africa. The charcoal‐inferred shifts in local and regional fire regimes were compared with previously published reconstructions of temperature, rainfall, seasonal drought severity, and vegetation dynamics to evaluate millennial‐scale drivers of fire occurrence. Our charcoal data indicate that fire in the dry lowland savanna of southeastern Kenya was not fuel‐limited during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and Late Glacial, in contrast to many other regions throughout the world. Fire activity remained high at Lake Challa probably because the relatively high mean‐annual temperature (~22 °C) allowed productive C4 grasses with high water‐use efficiency to dominate the landscape. From the LGM through the middle Holocene, the relative importance of savanna burning in the region varied primarily in response to changes in rainfall and dry‐season length, which were controlled by orbital insolation forcing of tropical monsoon dynamics. The fuel limitation that characterizes the region's fire regime today appears to have begun around 5000–6000 years ago, when warmer interglacial conditions coincided with prolonged seasonal drought. Thus, insolation‐driven variation in the amount and seasonality of rainfall during the past 25 000 years altered the immediate controls on fire occurrence in the grass‐dominated savannas of eastern equatorial Africa. These results show that climatic impacts on dry‐savanna burning are heterogeneous through time, with important implications for efforts to anticipate future shifts in fire‐mediated ecosystem processes.
Keywords:Africa  C4 grasses  charcoal  drought  fire  fuel limitation  grassland  Quaternary  savanna  seasonality
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