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Mountain forest islands and Holocene environmental changes in Central Asia: A case study from the southern Gobi Altay, Mongolia
Authors:Georg Miehe, Frank Schlü  tz, Sabine Miehe, Lars Opgenoorth, Jan Cermak, Rav   igijn Samiya, Eckehart J. J  ger,Karsten Wesche
Affiliation:

aFaculty of Geography, University of Marburg, Deutschhausstr. 10, D-35032 Marburg, Germany

bDepartment of Palynology and Climate Dynamics, Albrecht-v.-Haller-Institute of Plant Sciences, University of Göttingen, Untere Karspüle 2, D-37073 Göttingen, Germany

cDepartment of Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Mongolian State University, Ulaan Baatar, P.O. Box 377, Mongolia

dInstitute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden, University of Halle-Wittenberg, Am Kirchtor 1, D-06108 Halle, Germany

Abstract:A multi-proxy case study conducted on Central Asia's most isolated mountain forest sheds light on the apparent decline of forest in the Subboreal time period and the incisive environmental changes from dark taiga to steppe in the Gobi Altay of Southern Mongolia over the last 5000 yr.

New vegetation records from the ‘Gobi Gurvan Saykhan’ (43°30′ N/103°10′ E) reveal long distance disjunctions of birch–willow forests as well as a number of herbaceous forest plants. Thus the question arises as to whether long-distance dispersal or fragmentation, following climatic changes and human interference, are more plausible explanations for such a pattern. Analysis of current plant distribution patterns lead to conclusions which are corroborated by zoological surveys of the Gobi Altay: During the Holocene, dark taiga forests apparently existed approximately 600 km to the southeast of their present range, and pollen analysis and charcoal remains provide evidence of a forest decline during the Subboreal time period. The presence of humans during these environmental changes is highly probable as pollen indicating human presence was found. Thus, it is assumed that humans at least contributed to the subboreal forest decline and the spreading of sagebrush and pastures. Moreover we cannot rule out with certainty that disjunctions of forest flora between the Gobi Altay and the forests of north-eastern Tibet are indicative of migration through the present North China desert, as forests may have partly replaced deserts during the moister periods of the Holocene. This multidisciplinary approach implies a mid-Holocene and subboreal scenario, which is new for Central Asia and more in accordance with the environmental history of the Holocene in the western desert belt of the Old World.

Keywords:Central Asia   Gobi desert   Boreal taiga forest   Holocene forest decline   Climate change   Human impact   Plant distribution
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