The Canterbury high country is a favourable location to examine climate-change histories because it lies in the lee of the Southern Alps. This causes the area to be a rain-shadow region and it is sensitive to changes in the strength and persistence of the regional westerly flow. Strong westerly flow is associated with droughts and high summer temperatures. In contrast, weakened westerly flow allows moisture from the east to penetrate these upland basins. As a consequence, this is an important area to study changes in the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds in this sector of the Southern Ocean. This record is unusual because it comes from near the natural tree line and as a consequence should be particularly sensitive to climate change and other environmental forcing. There are a number of significant palaeoecological questions that relate to this setting, including: (1) the persistence of montane podocarp woodland dominated by Phyllocladus and Halocarpus into the Holocene and the timing and cause of its subsequent replacement by beech forest; (2) the role played by fire in controlling vegetation structure and species composition; and (3) human impacts in the high country, especially with the transfer of high-country land into the conservation estate and consequential issues of ecological and landscape management (Armstrong et al. 2005).
CITATION STYLE
Pugh, J. M., & Shulmeister, J. (2010). Holocene vegetation history of a high-elevation (1200 m) site in the Lake Heron Basin, inland Canterbury, New Zealand. In Altered Ecologies (Terra Australis 32): Fire, climate and human influence on terrestrial landscapes. ANU Press. https://doi.org/10.22459/ta32.11.2010.05
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