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Vegetation dynamics in central Africa since 18,000 yr BP: pollen records from the interlacustrine highlands of Burundi, Rwanda and western Uganda
Authors:Dominique Jolly,David Taylor,Robert Marchant,Alan Hamilton,Raymonde Bonnefille,Guillaume Buchet,&   Guy Riollet
Affiliation:Laboratoire de Géologie du Quaternaire, CNRS, CEREGE, BP 80, 13545 Aix-en-Provence Cedex 04, France, Global Systems Group, Department of Ecology, University of Lund, Ecology Building, Sölvegatan 37, S-223 62 Lund, Sweden;, Research Institute for Environmental Science and Management, University of Hull, Hull. HU6 7RX, U.K.;, WWF, Panda House, Weyside Park, Cattershall Lane, Godalming GU7 1XR, U.K.;, French Institute of Pondichery 11, St. Louis Street., PB 33 Pondichery 605 001, India;
Abstract:A standardized analysis of palaeoecological data, in the form of six pollen sequences and forty- four radiocarbon ages, has permitted a region-wide reconstruction of Late Quaternary vegetation dynamics for the interlacustrine highlands of central Africa.
A landscape widely dominated by ericaceous scrub and grasslands, but also supporting sparse patches of open-canopied montane forest, possibly in those areas with a topography most favourable to the growth of trees, is indicated for the last glacial maximum of 18,000 yr bp . Major expansions in the extent of upper altitudinal forms of montane forest occurred from around 12,500 yr bp , while lower moist montane forest—the expected climax for much of the region today—did not become prominent until 11,000 yr bp to 10,000 yr bp . From the palaeoecological evidence at least, it appears that the major east Central forest refuge, proposed by some workers on the basis of current species' distribution patterns, did not extend to the eastern flanks of the Albertine Rift.
A late glacial–early Holocene transition is only fully chronicled in two of the sites. However, it appears that the expansion of lower montane forest had a time-transgressive pattern across the region, and was not simply from low to high altitude. The composition of forests during the early Holocene appears to have been different to that in the later stages of the present interglacial, as taxa presently associated with wetter and/or more open forest types were much more common. Pollen data also indicate that higher altitude parts of the interlacustrine highlands were more attractive to the earliest (possibly Bantu-speaking) farmers and metal-workers. There is evidence of wide-spread forest clearance around the beginning of the present millennium, possibly as a result of substantial changes in socio-economic conditions, and patterns of settlement, associated with the onset of the Late Iron Age.
Keywords:Central Africa    vegetation change    human impact    pollen    last glacial    Holocene
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