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The Holocene 17 (2007) 195-205
Spatial heterogeneity of land cover response to climatic change in the Nilgiri highlands (southern India) since the Last Glacial Maximum
Laurent Caner ( ) 1, Danny Lo Seen 2, Yanni Gunnell 3, B. R. Ramesh 4, 5, G. Bourgeon 6
(2007)

Fourteen hillslope soil profiles were sampled under natural vegetation (i.e., grassland or forest) and plantations in the Nilgiri highlands, southern India. Delta 13C ratios were measured at different depths and 14C ages determined for six profiles. In these highland soils where the turnover rate of organic matter is extremely low, the Δ13C ratios of entire soil profiles have recorded signatures of past land cover. By correlating the data with results previously obtained from peat bogs and with knowledge concerning the history of human settlement, we distinguish three contrasting trajectories of palaeoenvironmental history and landscape change since the Last Glacial Maximum. In the central Nilgiris, between 18 and 10 ka BP, forest expansion occurred due to the conjunction of a wetter climate (the maximum of southwest monsoon-related humidity occurring at ca. 11 ka BP) and higher temperatures; since 10 ka BP, the reversal towards grassland vegetation is attributed to drier conditions. In the western Nilgiris, where strong southwest monsoon winds permanently restrict forest patches to sheltered valley sites, steady but limited expansion of forest from 18 ka BP to the present is recorded and attributed to rising temperatures. The southern and eastern Nilgiris, where the northeast monsoon contributes 20% of the annual rainfall, are the less sensitive to fluctuations in the southwest monsoon. In these areas, rapid and extensive expansion of forest occurred mainly as a consequence of higher temperatures from 18 ka BP to the present. Massive deforestation by Badaga cultivators and Europeans planters followed after the 16th century AD. As a result, and in contrast with the western Nilgiris where the land cover mosaic has remained remarkably stable in the last 18 ka BP, the current landscape differs sharply from the land cover pattern detected by the soil record.
1 :  HydrASA (Hydrogéologie, argiles, sols et altérations)
CNRS : FRE3114 – Université de Poitiers
2 :  Territoires, Environnement, Télédétection et Information Spatiale (UMR TETIS)
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement [CIRAD] : UMR91 – CEMAGREF-UR LCMO – Ecole Nationale du Génie Rural des Eaux et Forêts
3 :  Laboratoire de géographie physique (LGP)
CNRS : UMR8591 – Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne – Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne (UPEC)
4 :  Natural Resources Canada
Natural Resources Canada
5 :  Institut Français de Pondichéry (IFP)
Ministère des Affaires étrangères et européennes – CNRS : UMIFRE21
6 :  Risque environnemental lié au recyclage (Recyclage et risque)
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement [CIRAD] : UPR78
Sciences du Vivant/Sciences agricoles/Science des sols

Planète et Univers/Sciences de la Terre/Climatologie

Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Géographie
India – soil organic matter – carbon isotope ratios – Asian monsoon – land cover – Late Glacial Maximum
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