14C Dating and Stable Carbon Isotopes of Soil Organic Matter in Forest-Savanna Boundary Areas in the Southern Brazilian Amazon Region
Issue Date
1998-01-01Keywords
savannasAmazonas Brazil
Humaita Brazil
Rondonia Brazil
forests
Amazon Basin
climate change
Brazil
South America
vegetation
isotope ratios
Holocene
soils
paleoclimatology
organic compounds
Cenozoic
charcoal
Quaternary
C 14
carbon
dates
isotopes
radioactive isotopes
C 13 C 12
stable isotopes
absolute age
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Pessenda, L. C. R., Gouveia, S. E. M., Aravena, R., Gomes, B. M., Boulet, R., & Ribeiro, A. D. S. (1998). 14C dating and stable carbon isotopes of soil organic matter in forest–savanna boundary areas in the southern Brazilian Amazon region. Radiocarbon, 40(2), 1013-1022.Journal
RadiocarbonDescription
From the 16th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Gronigen, Netherlands, June 16-20, 1997.Additional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
This study, which was carried out in the southern Brazilian Amazon region (Rondonia state and Humaita, Southern Amazon state), presents and discusses the significance of carbon isotope data measured in soil profiles collected across natural boundaries of forest to savanna vegetation. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the expansion-regression dynamics of these vegetation units in relation to climate changes during the Holocene. 14C data from charcoal, soil organic matter (SOM) and its component humin fraction indicate that the organic matter in the studied soils is essentially Holocene in origin. 13C data indicate that C3 type plants were the dominant vegetation at all study areas in the early Holocene, and during the entire Holocene, in the forest sites of Central Rondonia state and in the forest site 50 km from the city of Humaita. 13C data also indicate that C4 plants have influenced significantly the vegetation at the transitional forest and the Cerrado (wooded savanna) sites of Southern Rondonia state and the forest ecosystem located 20 km from the Humaita city. These typical C4 type isotopic signatures probably reflect a drier climate during the mid-Holocene. The 13C records representing probably the last 3000 yr show an expansion of the forest, due to a climatic improvement, in areas previously occupied by savanna vegetation. These results and other published data for the Amazon region indicate that the areas representing today's forest-savanna boundaries have been determined by significant vegetation changes during the Holocene. The boundary between forest and savanna vegetation seems to be quite sensitive to climatic change and should be the focus of more extensive research to correlate climate and past vegetation dynamics in the Amazon region.Type
Proceedingstext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200018981