Published April 7, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Global biome patterns of the Middle and Late Pleistocene

  • 1. Durham University
  • 2. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre
  • 3. University of Otago
  • 4. University of Reading
  • 5. University of Bristol

Description

Our primary aim was to assess the hypothesis that distinctive features of the patterns of vegetation change during successive Quaternary glacial–interglacial cycles reflect climatic differences arising from forcing differences. We addressed this hypothesis using 207 half-degree resolution global biome pattern simulations, for time slices between 800 ka and 2 ka, made using the LPJ-GUESS dynamic global vegetation model. Simulations were driven using ice-core atmospheric CO2 concentrations, Earth's obliquity, and outputs from a pre-industrial and 206 palaeoclimate experiments; four additional simulations were driven using projected future CO2 concentrations. Climate experiments were run using HadCM3. Using a rule-based approach, above-ground biomass and leaf area index of LPJ-GUESS plant functional types were used to infer each grid cell's biome. The hypothesis is supported by the palaeobiome simulations.

To enable comparisons with the climatic forcing, multivariate analyses were performed of global vegetation pattern dissimilarities between simulations. Results showed generally similar responses to glacial–interglacial climatic variations during each cycle, although no two interglacials or glacials had identical biome patterns. Atmospheric CO2 concentration was the strongest driver of the dissimilarity patterns. Dissimilarities relative to the time slice with the lowest atmospheric CO2 concentration show the log–linear relationship to atmospheric CO2 concentration expected of an index of ecocarbon sensitivity.

For each simulation, extent and total above-ground biomass of each biome were calculated globally and for three longitudinal segments corresponding to the major continental regions. Mean and minimum past extents of forest biomes, notably Temperate Summergreen Forest, in the three major continental regions strongly parallel relative tree diversities, hence supporting the hypothesis that past biome extents played an important role in determining present diversity.

Albeit that they reflect the climatic consequences only of the faster Earth system components, simulated potential future biome patterns are unlike any during the past 800 ky, and likely will continue to change markedly for millennia if projected CO2 concentrations are realised.

Notes

Adobe Acrobat or another .pdf viewer is needed to view 'slideshow'.  Other files can all be opened using a simple text file editor (e.g. Wordpad).

Funding provided by: Leverhulme Trust
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000275
Award Number: RPG-2014-338

Files

211_Global_Biome_Maps_with_Legend___Title_slide.pdf

Files (2.3 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:08094326105cff50c4aa3bb7e9dacffd
1.3 GB Preview Download
md5:e2a4626f33596ff034b5007d14c6ff84
144.0 MB Download
md5:7388e6d4a3dfdb86376c8cf7f4311fc1
36.6 MB Preview Download
md5:30d4cda08677d095b8a651490832cd42
326.3 kB Download
md5:3f6f68ae163c5e496202f28c6eeb0aa6
326.3 kB Download
md5:c5803e0fe7cda86528a56e6fc747c27e
326.3 kB Download
md5:fd7d268939b0e7fd0a06b60fff176d92
326.3 kB Download
md5:488936390ade2341c6ff2b990ab9efa4
404.5 kB Download
md5:e988e070f8973629b39b8ec12710f765
710.5 MB Download
md5:1370701ddf5e1dfd232c9d3e23f90fe3
58.0 MB Preview Download
md5:3ae3d63fbc40c98f4a1542edf1e94850
3.4 MB Download
md5:26768d42af42aeabf66b0cd67b014411
40.4 kB Preview Download
md5:7c99d9e84694c84e6de86551362d65f5
92.7 kB Preview Download