14 results on '"de Beaulieu JL"'
Search Results
2. Substantial light woodland and open vegetation characterized the temperate forest biome before Homo sapiens .
- Author
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Pearce EA, Mazier F, Normand S, Fyfe R, Andrieu V, Bakels C, Balwierz Z, Bińka K, Boreham S, Borisova OK, Brostrom A, de Beaulieu JL, Gao C, González-Sampériz P, Granoszewski W, Hrynowiecka A, Kołaczek P, Kuneš P, Magri D, Malkiewicz M, Mighall T, Milner AM, Möller P, Nita M, Noryśkiewicz B, Pidek IA, Reille M, Robertsson AM, Salonen JS, Schläfli P, Schokker J, Scussolini P, Šeirienė V, Strahl J, Urban B, Winter H, and Svenning JC
- Subjects
- Humans, Biodiversity, Pollen, Wood, Trees, Ecosystem, Forests
- Abstract
The extent of vegetation openness in past European landscapes is widely debated. In particular, the temperate forest biome has traditionally been defined as dense, closed-canopy forest; however, some argue that large herbivores maintained greater openness or even wood-pasture conditions. Here, we address this question for the Last Interglacial period (129,000-116,000 years ago), before Homo sapiens -linked megafauna declines and anthropogenic landscape transformation. We applied the vegetation reconstruction method REVEALS to 96 Last Interglacial pollen records. We found that light woodland and open vegetation represented, on average, more than 50% cover during this period. The degree of openness was highly variable and only partially linked to climatic factors, indicating the importance of natural disturbance regimes. Our results show that the temperate forest biome was historically heterogeneous rather than uniformly dense, which is consistent with the dependency of much of contemporary European biodiversity on open vegetation and light woodland.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Adapting through glacial cycles: insights from a long-lived tree (Taxus baccata).
- Author
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Mayol M, Riba M, González-Martínez SC, Bagnoli F, de Beaulieu JL, Berganzo E, Burgarella C, Dubreuil M, Krajmerová D, Paule L, Romšáková I, Vettori C, Vincenot L, and Vendramin GG
- Subjects
- Climate, DNA, Chloroplast, Europe, Genetic Variation, Ice Cover, Microsatellite Repeats, Phylogeography, Adaptation, Biological, Climate Change, Taxus genetics
- Abstract
Despite the large body of research devoted to understanding the role of Quaternary glacial cycles in the genetic divergence of European trees, the differential contribution of geographic isolation and/or environmental adaptation in creating population genetic divergence remains unexplored. In this study, we used a long-lived tree (Taxus baccata) as a model species to investigate the impact of Quaternary climatic changes on genetic diversity via neutral (isolation-by-distance) and selective (isolation-by-adaptation) processes. We applied approximate Bayesian computation to genetic data to infer its demographic history, and combined this information with past and present climatic data to assess the role of environment and geography in the observed patterns of genetic structure. We found evidence that yew colonized Europe from the East, and that European samples diverged into two groups (Western, Eastern) at the beginning of the Quaternary glaciations, c. 2.2 Myr before present. Apart from the expected effects of geographical isolation during glacials, we discovered a significant role of environmental adaptation during interglacials at the origin of genetic divergence between both groups. This process may be common in other organisms, providing new research lines to explore the effect of Quaternary climatic factors on present-day patterns of genetic diversity., (© 2015 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2015 New Phytologist Trust.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. [Pollen analysis from two littoral marshes (Bourdim and Garaat El-Ouez) in the El-Kala wet complex (North-East Algeria). Lateglacial and Holocene history of Algerian vegetation].
- Author
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Benslama M, Andrieu-Ponel V, Guiter F, Reille M, de Beaulieu JL, Migliore J, and Djamali M
- Subjects
- Algeria, Cedrus, Climate Change, Ecosystem, Geologic Sediments analysis, History, Ancient, Pinus, Poaceae, Quercus, Radiometric Dating, Pollen chemistry, Trees growth & development, Wetlands
- Abstract
The study of two pollen sequences from El-Kala marshes allowed the reconstruction of the regional vegetation history supported by eight radiocarbon dates. Pollen assemblages from Bourdim site were dominated by local input of Alnus and Salix, while regional vegetation was characterized by scattered Quercus suber forests with a well-developed Erica arborea matorral. While the vegetation dynamics recorded at Bourdim is recent (Late Holocene), the majority of the pollen diagram from Garaat El-Ouez is contemporaneous to the Late Pleniglacial and is characterized by open woodlands with Pinus, Poaceae and several heliophilous herbs. The significant values of Cedrus pollen identified in this period indicate that the region of El-Kala most probably played the role of a refugium for this tree., (Copyright © 2010 Académie des sciences. Published by Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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5. Authenticated DNA from ancient wood remains.
- Author
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Liepelt S, Sperisen C, Deguilloux MF, Petit RJ, Kissling R, Spencer M, de Beaulieu JL, Taberlet P, Gielly L, and Ziegenhagen B
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, DNA, Plant genetics, Wood
- Abstract
Background: The reconstruction of biological processes and human activities during the last glacial cycle relies mainly on data from biological remains. Highly abundant tissues, such as wood, are candidates for a genetic analysis of past populations. While well-authenticated DNA has now been recovered from various fossil remains, the final 'proof' is still missing for wood, despite some promising studies., Scope: The goal of this study was to determine if ancient wood can be analysed routinely in studies of archaeology and palaeogenetics. An experiment was designed which included blind testing, independent replicates, extensive contamination controls and rigorous statistical tests. Ten samples of ancient wood from major European forest tree genera were analysed with plastid DNA markers., Conclusions: Authentic DNA was retrieved from wood samples up to 1,000 years of age. A new tool for real-time vegetation history and archaeology is ready to use.
- Published
- 2006
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6. [Palaeostructures of vegetation at the upper limit of forests in the inner French Alps].
- Author
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Muller SD, Nakagawa T, de Beaulieu JL, Court-Picon M, Fauquette S, and Genries A
- Subjects
- Altitude, France, Pinus, Pollen physiology, Fossils, Paleontology, Plants, Trees
- Abstract
The comparison of six pollen diagrams from French Alps allows us to reconstruct the past changes of vegetation structure at the upper limit of Subalpine range. Dense populations of Pinus cembra developed between 6500 and 2400 cal. BP, both in the southern Alps and the northern ones. Southern Alps seem however to be characterised by higher altitudinal limits, as shown by the past development of fir forests at 2080 m a.s.l. in the Ubaye valley. This study highlights the importance of taking in account local parameters in regional or continental reviews.
- Published
- 2006
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7. [Does our interglacial period have an analogue in the past?].
- Author
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Cheddadi R, de Beaulieu JL, Jouzel J, Andrieu-Ponel V, Laurent JM, Reille M, Raynaud D, and Bar-Hen A
- Subjects
- France, Geologic Sediments, Geological Phenomena, Plants, Time, Climate, Geology
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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8. A new scenario for the quaternary history of European beech populations: palaeobotanical evidence and genetic consequences.
- Author
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Magri D, Vendramin GG, Comps B, Dupanloup I, Geburek T, Gömöry D, Latałowa M, Litt T, Paule L, Roure JM, Tantau I, van der Knaap WO, Petit RJ, and de Beaulieu JL
- Subjects
- Climate, DNA, Chloroplast analysis, Europe, Fagus physiology, Genetic Markers, Genetic Variation, Geography, Haplotypes, Pollen growth & development, Fagus genetics, Fossils
- Abstract
Here, palaeobotanical and genetic data for common beech (Fagus sylvatica) in Europe are used to evaluate the genetic consequences of long-term survival in refuge areas and postglacial spread. Four large datasets are presented, including over 400 fossil-pollen sites, 80 plant-macrofossil sites, and 450 and 600 modern beech populations for chloroplast and nuclear markers, respectively. The largely complementary palaeobotanical and genetic data indicate that: (i) beech survived the last glacial period in multiple refuge areas; (ii) the central European refugia were separated from the Mediterranean refugia; (iii) the Mediterranean refuges did not contribute to the colonization of central and northern Europe; (iv) some populations expanded considerably during the postglacial period, while others experienced only a limited expansion; (v) the mountain chains were not geographical barriers for beech but rather facilitated its diffusion; and (vi) the modern genetic diversity was shaped over multiple glacial-interglacial cycles. This scenario differs from many recent treatments of tree phylogeography in Europe that largely focus on the last ice age and the postglacial period to interpret genetic structure and argue that the southern peninsulas (Iberian, Italian and Balkan) were the main source areas for trees in central and northern Europe.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Similarity of vegetation dynamics during interglacial periods.
- Author
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Cheddadi R, de Beaulieu JL, Jouzel J, Andrieu-Ponel V, Laurent JM, Reille M, Raynaud D, and Bar-Hen A
- Subjects
- Climate, Ecosystem, Ice Cover, Plant Development, Pollen
- Abstract
The Velay sequence (France) provides a unique, continuous, palynological record spanning the last four climatic cycles. A pollen-based reconstruction of temperature and precipitation displays marked climatic cycles. An analysis of the climate and vegetation changes during the interglacial periods reveals comparable features and identical major vegetation successions. Although Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11.3 and the Holocene had similar earth precessional variations, their correspondence in terms of vegetation dynamics is low. MIS 9.5, 7.5, and especially 5.5 display closer correlation to the Holocene than MIS 11.3. Ecological factors, such as the distribution and composition of glacial refugia or postglacial migration patterns, may explain these discrepancies. Comparison of ecosystem dynamics during the past five interglacials suggests that vegetation development in the current interglacial has no analogue from the past 500,000 years.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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10. Record of metal workshops in peat deposits: history and environmental impact on the Mont Lozère Massif, France.
- Author
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Baron S, Lavoie M, Ploquin A, Carignan J, Pulido M, and De Beaulieu JL
- Subjects
- Environmental Monitoring, France, History, Ancient, History, Medieval, Humans, Lead analysis, Soil, Archaeology, Metallurgy history, Soil Pollutants analysis
- Abstract
This study aims to document the history of the metallurgical activities on the Mont Lozère massif in the Cévennes Mountains in Southern France. Many medieval sites of metallurgical wastes (slags) have been reported on the massif. These sites are thought to represent ancient lead workshops. The impact of past metallurgical activity on the environment was studied using geochemical and palynological techniques on a core collected in the Narses Mortes peatland near medieval smelting area. Two main periods of smelting activities during the last 2200 years were revealed bythe lead concentration and isotopic composition along the core profile: the first period corresponds to the Gallic period (approximately ca. 300 B.C. to ca. 20 A.D.) and the second one to the Medieval period (approximately ca. 1000-1300 A.D.). Forest disturbances are associated with lead anomalies for the two metallurgical activities described. The impact of the first metallurgy was moderate during the Gallic period, during which beech and birch were the tree species most affected. The second period corresponds to the observed slag present in the field. Along with agropastoral activities, the medieval smelting activities led to the definitive disappearance of all tree species on the summit zones of Mont Lozère. The abundance of ore resources and the earlier presence of wood on the massif justify the presence of workshops at this place. The relationship between mines and ores has been documented for the Medieval period. There is no archaeological proof concerning the Gallic activity. Nevertheless, 2500-2100 years ago, the borders of the Gallic Tribe territory, named the Gabales, were the same as the present-day borders of the Lozère department. Julius Caesar reported the existence of this tribe in 58 B.C. in "De Bello Gallico", and in Strabon (Book IV, 2.2) the "Gabales silver" and a "treasure of Gabales" are mentioned, but to this day, they have not been found.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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11. [Palynological evidence of anthropogenic pressure: effect on pollination dynamics in the Evian area since the middle Neolithic: the pollen record of La Beunaz (971 m a.s.l., northern Alps, France)].
- Author
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Guiter F, Andrieu-Ponel V, de Beaulieu JL, Ponel P, Nicoud G, and Blavoux B
- Subjects
- Carbon Radioisotopes analysis, Demography, Environment, France, Geography, Germination, Plant Development, Fossils, Plant Physiological Phenomena, Pollen physiology
- Abstract
This paper presents a pollen diagram from La Beunaz peat-bog (southeast of Evian, Haute-Savoie, France), which provides the first detailed record of human impact on vegetation of the southern bank of Lake Geneva since the Middle Neolithic. The radiocarbon-dated pollen profile is correlated with micro-charcoal record and archaeological data. The results suggest that several phases of deforestations since 4615+75/-70 years BP occurred, in relation to human activities (agriculture, pastoralism). Tombs and vestiges of lacustrine villages indicate that the region was intensively and recurrently occupied by man during at that time.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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12. Glacial refugia: hotspots but not melting pots of genetic diversity.
- Author
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Petit R, Aguinagalde I, de Beaulieu JL, Bittkau C, Brewer S, Cheddadi R, Ennos R, Fineschi S, Grivet D, Lascoux M, Mohanty A, Müller-Starck G, Demesure-Musch B, Palmé A, Martín JP, Rendell S, and Vendramin GG
- Subjects
- Europe, Genetics, Population, Geography, Haplotypes, Seeds, Temperature, DNA, Chloroplast genetics, Ecosystem, Genetic Variation, Magnoliopsida genetics, Trees genetics
- Abstract
Glacial refuge areas are expected to harbor a large fraction of the intraspecific biodiversity of the temperate biota. To test this hypothesis, we studied chloroplast DNA variation in 22 widespread European trees and shrubs sampled in the same forests. Most species had genetically divergent populations in Mediterranean regions, especially those with low seed dispersal abilities. However, the genetically most diverse populations were not located in the south but at intermediate latitudes, a likely consequence of the admixture of divergent lineages colonizing the continent from separate refugia.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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13. High-resolution record of climate stability in France during the last interglacial period.
- Author
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Rioual P, Andrieu-Ponel V, Rietti-Shati M, Battarbee RW, de Beaulieu JL, Cheddadi R, Reille M, Svobodova H, and Shemesh A
- Subjects
- Animals, Diatoms, France, Plankton, Pollen, Silicon Dioxide, Time, Climate
- Abstract
The last interglacial period (127-110 kyr ago) has been considered to be an analogue to the present interglacial period, the Holocene, which may help us to understand present climate evolution. But whereas Holocene climate has been essentially stable in Europe, variability in climate during the last interglacial period has remained unresolved, because climate reconstructions from ice cores, continental records and marine sediment cores give conflicting results for this period. Here we present a high-resolution multi-proxy lacustrine record of climate change during the last interglacial period, based on oxygen isotopes in diatom silica, diatom assemblages and pollen-climate transfer functions from the Ribains maar in France. Contrary to a previous study, our data do not show a cold event interrupting the warm interglacial climate. Instead, we find an early temperature maximum with a transition to a colder climate about halfway through the sequence. The end of the interglacial period is clearly marked by an abrupt change in all proxy records. Our study confirms that in southwestern Europe the last interglacial period was a time of climatic stability and is therefore still likely to represent a useful analogue for the present climate.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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14. The Holocene at Lac de Creno, Corsica, France: a key site for the whole island.
- Author
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Reille M, Gamisans J, Andrieu-Ponel V, and De Beaulieu JL
- Abstract
Two Holocene lake sequences from Lac de Creno, Corsica were analysed on the basis of 119 pollen spectra and with the support of 13
14 C-calibrated dates. The lower part of one of these sequences, corresponding to the late- glacial period, has been published previously. The first third of the Post-glacial is characterized by very particular forest dynamics, namely the absence of a role for deciduous Quercus and Corylus, the presence of mesophilous vegetation types dominated by Taxus, and the major forest role of Erica arborea at lower and mean altitude. At about 7440 cal BP, the occurrence of a major anthropogenic action brought about significant changes in the vegetation, notably an increase of deciduous Quercus and the expansion of Quercus ilex. Later, three major human-induced events are identified: the first, at about 2290 cal BP, is the cause of a short local expansion of Abies; the second, at about 1150 cal BP, is the degradation of deciduous forests to the benefit of Fagus; the third, at about 310 cal BP, corresponds to the disappearance of Fagus and its replacement by Pinus. Pollen data indicate that Q. ilex, Abies and Fagus are not indigenous in Corsica but spread there during the Postglacial ; this probably took place at about 6980 cal BP for Q. ilex.- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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