10 results on '"Morin-Rivat, Julie"'
Search Results
2. The influence of spatially structured soil properties on tree community assemblages at a landscape scale in the tropical forests of southern Cameroon
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Vleminckx, Jason, Doucet, Jean-Louis, Morin-Rivat, Julie, Biwolé, Achille B., Bauman, David, Hardy, Olivier J., Fayolle, Adeline, Gillet, Jean-François, Daïnou, Kasso, Gorel, Anaïs, and Drouet, Thomas
- Published
- 2017
3. New data on the recent history of the littoral forests of southern Cameroon: an insight into the role of historical human disturbances on the current forest composition
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Biwolé, Achille B., Morin-Rivat, Julie, Fayolle, Adeline, Bitondo, Dieudonné, Dedry, Laurent, Dainou, Kasso, Hardy, Olivier J., and Doucet, Jean-Louis
- Published
- 2015
4. Effects of 20th‐century settlement fires on landscape structure and forest composition in eastern Quebec, Canada.
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Terrail, Raphaële, Morin‐Rivat, Julie, Lafontaine, Guillaume, Fortin, Marie‐Josée, Arseneault, Dominique, and Wulf, Monika
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SPATIAL data structures , *FOREST degradation , *LAND use , *DEAD trees , *ALNUS glutinosa , *EUCLIDEAN distance , *DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) - Abstract
Questions: Which role did historical anthropogenic disturbances play in modifying the natural fire regime? To what extent have they shaped current forest? Do those disturbances have lingering impacts in the present‐day landscape? Are certain tree species related to former land use? Location: eastern Quebec, Canada. Methods: Spatial data on landscape structure, burnt areas, settlements, and forest patches were vectorized on an archival map dating back to 1938. For each landscape class, the total area, the number of polygons, and the proportion of the total landscape occupied by the largest polygon were analyzed according to elevation and to the Euclidean distance from the "settlement" polygons. An index of the spatial link between the landscape classes was calculated, based on the proportions of the perimeter of the polygons of each class shared with each of the other classes. A Kolmogorov–Smirnov test for pooled data was used to obtain the frequency distributions of landscape classes as a function of distance. The association between settlement fires and present‐day vegetation, and more specifically Populus and Betula stands, was tested by superimposing the most recent ecoforest map on the 1938 land‐use map. Distance bands on either side of the 1938 settlement front were delineated to calculate the proportion of each distance class occupied by present‐day aspen and birch stands. Results: Anthropogenic fires generated a recognizable landscape pattern of land use. Burnt areas were mostly located within 2 km from a settlement. Most burnings observed on the 1938 map were human‐induced, based on their spatial connection with the settled areas. Lingering impacts of these 20th‐century fires on present‐day forests were identified using the peculiar spatial distribution of tree species. The presence and spatial distribution of aspen in the present‐day landscape is tightly associated with previously burnt areas. Conclusions: Past land‐use strongly altered the natural fires regime and associated tree species. Current land‐use could potentially lead to increased degraded forest landscapes in the near future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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5. Present-day central African forest is a legacy of the 19th century human history.
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Morin-Rivat, Julie, Fayolle, Adeline, Favier, Charly, Bremond, Laurent, Gourlet-Fleury, Sylvie, Bayol, Nicolas, Lejeune, Philippe, Beeckman, Hans, and Doucet, Jean-Louis
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FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST canopies , *FOREST regeneration , *HISTORY of forestry , *PLANT species , *DEFORESTATION , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The populations of light-demanding trees that dominate the canopy of central African forests are now aging. Here, we show that the lack of regeneration of these populations began ca. 165 ya (around 1850) after major anthropogenic disturbances ceased. Since 1885, less itinerancy and disturbance in the forest has occurred because the colonial administrations concentrated people and villages along the primary communication axes. Local populations formerly gardened the forest by creating scattered openings, which were sufficiently large for the establishment of light-demanding trees. Currently, common logging operations do not create suitable openings for the regeneration of these species, whereas deforestation degrades landscapes. Using an interdisciplinary approach, which included paleoecological, archaeological, historical, and dendrological data, we highlight the long-term history of human activities across central African forests and assess the contribution of these activities to present-day forest structure and composition. The conclusions of this sobering analysis present challenges to current silvicultural practices and to those of the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. High spatial resolution of late-Holocene human activities in the moist forests of central Africa using soil charcoal and charred botanical remains.
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Morin-Rivat, Julie, Biwolé, Achille, Gorel, Anaïs-Pasiphaé, Vleminckx, Jason, Gillet, Jean-François, Bourland, Nils, Hardy, Olivier J., Smith, Alexandre Livingstone, Daïnou, Kasso, Dedry, Laurent, Beeckman, Hans, and Doucet, Jean-Louis
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FORESTS & forestry , *HOLOCENE stratigraphic geology , *CHARCOAL , *PALEOBOTANY , *SOIL testing , *ARCHAEOLOGY methodology - Abstract
Palaeoecological and archaeological studies have demonstrated that human populations have long inhabited the moist forests of central Africa. However, spatial and temporal patterns of human activities have hardly been investigated with satisfactory accuracy. In this study, we propose to characterize past human activities at local scale by using a systematic quantitative and qualitative methodology based on soil charcoal and charred botanical remains. A total of 88 equidistant test-pits were excavated along six transects in two contrasting forest types in southern Cameroon. Charred botanical remains were collected by water-sieving and sorted by type (wood charcoals, oil palm endocarps and unidentified seeds). A total of 50 Accelerator Mass Spectrometry 14C dates were also obtained. Results showed that charred macroremains were found at multiple places in the forest, suggesting scattered human activities, which were distributed into two main periods (Phase A: 2300–1300 BP; Phase B: 580 BP to the present). Charred botanical remains indicated two types of land-use: (1) domestic, with oil palm endocarps most often associated with potsherds (villages) and (2) agricultural, with charcoal as probable remnant of slash-and-burn cultivation (fields). Oil palm endocarp abundance decreased with distance from the identified human settlements. Our methodology allowed documenting, at high resolution, the spatial and temporal patterns of human activities in central African moist forests and could be applied to other tropical contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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7. How Tightly Linked Are Pericopsis elata (Fabaceae) Patches to Anthropogenic Disturbances in Southeastern Cameroon?
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Bourland, Nils, Cerisier, François, Daïnou, Kasso, Livingstone Smith, Alexandre, Hubau, Wannes, Beeckman, Hans, Brostaux, Yves, Fayolle, Adeline, Biwolé, Achille Bernard, Fétéké, Fousséni, Gillet, Jean-François, Morin-Rivat, Julie, Lejeune, Philippe, Tiba, Eric Ntoudé, Van Acker, Joris, and Doucet, Jean-Louis
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ECOLOGICAL disturbances ,ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature ,RAIN forests ,SHIFTING cultivation ,CHARCOAL ,TIMBER - Abstract
While most past studies have emphasized the relationships between specific forest stands and edaphic factors, recent observations in Central African moist forests suggested that an increase of slash-and-burn agriculture since 3000-2000 BP (Before Present) could be the main driver of the persistence of light-demanding tree species. In order to examine anthropogenic factors in the persistence of such populations, our study focused on Pericopsis elata, an endangered clustered timber species. We used a multidisciplinary approach comprised of botanical, anthracological and archaeobotanical investigations to compare P. elata patches with surrounding stands of mixed forest vegetation ("out-zones"). Charcoal samples were found in both zones, but were significantly more abundant in the soils of patches. Eleven groups of taxa were identified from the charcoals, most of them also present in the current vegetation. Potsherds were detected only inside P. elata patches and at different soil depths, suggesting a long human presence from at least 2150 to 195 BP, as revealed by our charcoal radiocarbon dating. We conclude that current P. elata patches most likely result from shifting cultivation that occurred ca. two centuries ago. The implications of our findings for the dynamics and management of light-demanding tree species are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. Soil Charcoal to Assess the Impacts of Past Human Disturbances on Tropical Forests.
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Vleminckx, Jason, Morin-Rivat, Julie, Biwolé, Achille B., Daïnou, Kasso, Gillet, Jean-François, Doucet, Jean-Louis, Drouet, Thomas, and Hardy, Olivier J.
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TROPICAL forests , *FOREST soils , *CHARCOAL , *FOREST canopy ecology , *PLANT species , *FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
The canopy of many central African forests is dominated by light-demanding tree species that do not regenerate well under themselves. The prevalence of these species might result from ancient slash-and-burn agricultural activities that created large openings, while a decline of these activities since the colonial period could explain their deficit of regeneration. To verify this hypothesis, we compared soil charcoal abundance, used as a proxy for past slash-and-burn agriculture, and tree species composition assessed on 208 rainforest 0.2 ha plots located in three areas from Southern Cameroon. Species were classified in regeneration guilds (pioneer, non-pioneer light-demanding, shade-bearer) and characterized by their wood-specific gravity, assumed to reflect light requirement. We tested the correlation between soil charcoal abundance and: (i) the relative abundance of each guild, (ii) each species and family abundance and (iii) mean wood-specific gravity. Charcoal was found in 83% of the plots, indicating frequent past forest fires. Radiocarbon dating revealed two periods of fires: “recent” charcoal were on average 300 years old (up to 860 BP, n = 16) and occurred in the uppermost 20 cm soil layer, while “ancient” charcoal were on average 1900 years old (range: 1500 to 2800 BP, n = 43, excluding one sample dated 9400 BP), and found in all soil layers. While we expected a positive correlation between the relative abundance of light-demanding species and charcoal abundance in the upper soil layer, overall there was no evidence that the current heterogeneity in tree species composition can be explained by charcoal abundance in any soil layer. The absence of signal supporting our hypothesis might result from (i) a relatively uniform impact of past slash-and-burn activities, (ii) pedoturbation processes bringing ancient charcoal to the upper soil layer, blurring the signal of centuries-old Human disturbances, or (iii) the prevalence of other environmental factors on species composition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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9. NEW EVIDENCE OF HUMAN ACTIVITIES DURING THE HOLOCENE IN THE LOWLAND FORESTS OF THE NORTHERN CONGO BASIN.
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Morin-Rivat, Julie, Fayolle, Adeline, Gillet, Jean-François, Bourland, Nils, Gourlet-Fleury, Sylvie, Oslisly, Richard, Bremond, Laurent, Bentaleb, Ilham, Beeckman, Hans, and Doucet, Jean-Louis
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HOLOCENE Epoch ,PLANT remains (Archaeology) ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,RADIOCARBON dating - Abstract
In the last decade, the myth of the pristine tropical forest has been seriously challenged. In central Africa, there is a growing body of evidence for past human settlements along the Atlantic forests, but very little information is available about human activities further inland. Therefore, this study aimed at determining the temporal and spatial patterns of human activities in an archaeologically unexplored area of 110,000 km2 located in the northern Congo Basin and currently covered by dense forest. Fieldwork involving archaeology as well as archaeobotany was undertaken in 36 sites located in southeastern Cameroon and in the northern Republic of Congo. Evidence of past human activities through either artifacts or charred botanical remains was observed in all excavated test pits across the study area. The set of 43 radiocarbon dates extending from 15,000 BP to the present time showed a bimodal distribution in the Late Holocene, which was interpreted as two phases of human expansion with an intermediate phase of depopulation. The 2300-1300 BP phase is correlated with the migrations of supposed farming populations from northwestern Cameroon. Between 1300 and 670 BP, less material could be dated. This is in agreement with the population collapse already reported for central Africa. Following this, the 670-20 BP phase corresponds to a new period of human expansion known as the Late Iron Age. These results bring new and extensive evidence of human activities in the northern Congo Basin and support the established chronology for human history in central Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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10. WEST CENTRAL AFRICAN PEOPLES: SURVEY OF RADIOCARBON DATES OVER THE PAST 5000 YEARS.
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Oslisly, Richard, Bentaleb, Ilham, Favier, Charly, Fontugne, Michel, Gillet, Jean François, and Morin-Rivat, Julie
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RADIOCARBON dating ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,ANTIQUITIES ,SOCIAL evolution ,HINTERLAND ,DEMOGRAPHIC change - Abstract
Tracing human history in west central Africa suffers from a scarcity of historical data and archaeological remains. In order to provide new insight into this problem, we reviewed 733 radiocarbon dates of archaeological sites from the end of the Late Stone Age, Neolithic Stage, and Early and Late Iron Age in Cameroon, Gabon, Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Republic of Congo, and the western Democratic Republic of Congo. This review provides a spatiotemporal framework of human settlement in the forest biome. Beyond the well-known initial spread of Iron Age populations through central African forests from 2500 cal BP, it depicts the geographical patterns and links with the cultural evolution of the successive phases of human expansion from 5000 to 3000 cal BP and then from 3000 to 1600 cal BP, of the hinterland depopulation from 1350 to 860 cal BP, and of recolonization up to 500 cal BP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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