Plant migration and plant communities at the time of the "Green Sahara"

Watrin, Julie, Lezine, Anne-Marie, Hely, Christelle, Cour, Pierre, Ballouche, Duzer, Elenga, Hilaire, Fredoux, Ariane, Guinet, Phillippe, Jahns, Susanne, Kadomura, Hiroshi, Maley, Jean, Mercuri, Anna-Maria, Pons, Armand, Reynaud-Farrera, Isabelle, Ritchie, Jim, Salzmann, Ulrich, Schulz, Erhard, Tossou, Monique, Vincens, Annie and Waller, Martyn (2009) Plant migration and plant communities at the time of the "Green Sahara". Comptes Rendus Geoscience, 341 (8-9). pp. 656-670. ISSN 1631-0713

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.crte.2009.06.007

Abstract

Around 8500 cal years BP, at the time of the maximum of the African Humid Period, lakes and wetlands expanded in the present-day Sahara while large paleodrainages were formed or re-actived, in response to an orbitally-induced increase in monsoon rainfall. It has been suggested that the direct consequence of this increase in rainfall was the northward displacement of the Sahara/Sahel boundary, thought to have reached 23 degrees N in central and eastern Africa. Here, we show a more complex situation characterized by an increase in biodiversity as the desert accommodated more humid-adapted species from tropical forests and wooded grasslands: tropical plant species now found some 400 to 500 km to the south probably entered the desert as gallery-forest formations along rivers and lakes where they benefited from permanent fresh water. At the same time, Saharan trees and shrubs persisted, giving rise to a vegetation that has no analogue today. In this article, we present distribution maps of selected plant species to show both the amplitude of the vegetation change compared to the present and the composition of the past plant communities. We also estimate the migration rate of tropical plant taxa. to their northernmost position in the Sahara. This study is based on the use of several data sets: a data set of the modern plant distribution in northern Africa and a data set of modem and fossil pollen sites (from the African Pollen Database, http://fpd.mediasfrance.org/ and http://medias.obs-mip.fr/apd/). To cite this article: J. Watrin et al., C R. Geoscience 341 (2009). (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS on behalf of Academie des sciences.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: West Africa, fossil pollen, biodiversity, migration rates, holocene, Green Sahara
Subjects: F600 Geology
Department: Faculties > Engineering and Environment > Geography and Environmental Sciences
Depositing User: Ulrich Salzmann
Date Deposited: 12 Mar 2013 11:26
Last Modified: 13 Oct 2019 00:25
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/11403

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