Late Quaternary climate change, relict populations and present-day refugia in the northern Atacama Desert: a case study from Quebrada La Higuera (18° S)
Author
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Mujica, María Isabel
Author
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Latorre, Claudio
Author
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Maldonado, Antonio
Author
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González Silvestre, Leticia
Author
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Pinto, Raquel
Author
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Pol-Holz, Ricardo de
Author
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Santoro, Calogero
Admission date
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2015-08-13T19:23:20Z
Available date
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2015-08-13T19:23:20Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Biogeography (J. Biogeogr.) (2015) 42, 76–88
en_US
Identifier
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1365-2699
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12383
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132716
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Aim In deserts, past climate change (and particularly past rainfall variability)
plays a large role in explaining current plant species distributions. We ask
which species were most and which were least affected by changes in rainfall
during the late Quaternary in northernmost Chile.
Location Quebrada La Higuera (QLH; 18° S), a shallow canyon that cuts
east–west through the western Andean precordillera of northern Chile, connecting
the Altiplano with the hyperarid Atacama Desert.
Methods We collected and dated 22 rodent middens from elevations of 3100–
3500 m in QLH. These were analysed for identifiable plant macrofossils and
pollen. We also measured chinchilla rat (Abrocoma cinerea) faecal pellets in the
youngest middens to explore how they relate to past ecological and climatic
change.
Results The three oldest middens dated to more than 37 ka (thousand calibrated
14C years), four middens dated to 14.4–11.6 ka, and fifteen middens
spanned the last 650 years. During all the intervals examined, extralocal species
(those found today at higher elevations and indicative of positive rainfall anomalies)
were present at our midden sites. In the youngest interval, Parastrephia pollen
(indicating increased rainfall) increased abruptly at ad 1760 and remained
high until the mid-1800s. This increase was also seen in our faecal pellet record.
Main conclusions Extralocal species were prevalent in late Pleistocene middens
at lower elevations when the climate was wetter. When combined with other
regional midden records, we postulate that many species found today in the Altiplano
were displaced to lower elevations during the late Pleistocene. The recent
large-scale mortality documented among arboreal cactus populations along the
present upper margins of the Atacama suggests that these are relict populations
that are likely to have flourished during a wetter period in the early 1800s.
en_US
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
FONDECYT 1100916, FONDECYT 1130279 andInstitute of Ecology and Biodiversity (grants ICM P05-002
and PFB 23)
Late Quaternary climate change, relict populations and present-day refugia in the northern Atacama Desert: a case study from Quebrada La Higuera (18° S)