Palynological reconstruction of environmental changes in coastal wetlands of the Florida Everglades since the mid-Holocene.
Autores
Quaternary Research, v. 83(3)
Publicado en
Quaternary Research, v. 83(3)
Año de publicación
2016
Afiliaciones
Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, School of the Coast and Environment, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA
Programa
CRN3
Proyecto
CRN3025
Keywords
Shark River Estuary, Everglades, Florida, Mangroves, Pollen, Short- and long-hydroperiod prairie Wetlands
Palynological, loss-on-ignition, and X-ray fluorescence data from a 5.25 m sediment core from a mangrove forest at the mouth of the Shark River Estuary in the southwestern Everglades National Park, Florida were used to reconstruct changes occurring in coastal wetlands since the mid-Holocene. This multi-proxy record contains the longest paleoecological history to date in the southwestern Everglades. The Shark River Estuary basin was formed ~ 5700 cal yr BP in response to increasing precipitation. Initial wetlands were frequently-burned short-hydroperiod prairies, which transitioned into long-hydroperiod prairies with sloughs in which peat deposits began to accumulate continuously about 5250 cal yr BP. Our data suggest that mangrove communities started to appear after ~ 3800 cal yr BP declines in the abundance of charcoal suggested gradual replacement of fire-dominated wetlands by mangrove forest over the following 2650 yr. By ~ 1150 cal yr BP, a dense Rhizophora mangle dominated mangrove forest had formed at the mouth of the Shark River. The mangrove-dominated coastal ecosystem here was established at least 2000 yr later than has been previously estimated.