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Sedimentary ancient DNA shows terrestrial plant richness continuously increased over the Holocene in northern Fennoscandia

Authors :
Iva Pitelkova
Dilli Prasad Rijal
Tomasz Goslar
Youri Lammers
Nigel G. Yoccoz
Karin F. Helmens
Inger Greve Alsos
Francisco Javier Ancin Murguzur
Torbjørn Alm
Kari Anne Bråthen
Mary E. Edwards
Peter D. Heintzman
Antony G. Brown
Kelsey Lorberau
Jostein Bakke
J. Sakari Salonen
Department of Geosciences and Geography
Source :
eabf9557, Science Advances
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

SedaDNA reveals regional climate and bedrock nutrients as major drivers of terrestrial plant diversity in northern Fennoscandia.<br />The effects of climate change on species richness are debated but can be informed by the past. Here, we generated a sedimentary ancient DNA dataset covering 10 lakes and applied novel methods for data harmonization. We assessed the impact of Holocene climate changes and nutrients on terrestrial plant richness in northern Fennoscandia. We find that richness increased steeply during the rapidly warming Early Holocene. In contrast to findings from most pollen studies, we show that richness continued to increase thereafter, although the climate was stable, with richness and the regional species pool only stabilizing during the past three millennia. Furthermore, overall increases in richness were greater in catchments with higher soil nutrient availability. We suggest that richness will increase with ongoing warming, especially at localities with high nutrient availability and assuming that human activity remains low in the region, although lags of millennia may be expected.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
eabf9557, Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0265647b1e5d4a6c3f86a2b55a312bee