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Climate, fire, farming and the recent vegetation history of subantarctic Campbell Island

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2007

Matt McGlone
Affiliation:
Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Linden 7640, New Zealand. E-mail: [email protected]
Janet Wilmshurst
Affiliation:
Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Linden 7640, New Zealand. E-mail: [email protected]
Colin Meurk
Affiliation:
Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Linden 7640, New Zealand. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Campbell Island is a small, uninhabited peat-covered island lying in the cool southern ocean 600 km south of the New Zealand mainland. Dracophyllum scrub is the main cover from sea level to 200 m, above which tussock grassland, macrophyllous forbs and tundra dominate. Seven peat profiles from sea level to the tundra zone provide an elevational transect for pollen and charcoal records spanning the last 500 years. Scrub density was relatively low between 200 and 400 cal yrs BP, possibly due to Little Ice Age cooling, but had recovered by the time Europeans discovered the island in AD 1810. Burning and grazing during a brief farming episode (AD 1895–1931) severely reduced scrub and palatable grasses and forbs. Vegetation recovery is now well advanced following cessation of farming and the later elimination of all feral grazing animals, cats and rats. Climates were cool in the southwest Pacific during the farming period, and since AD 1970 the island has warmed by c. 0·5°C. However, there has been no upwards movement of the scrubline despite vigorous regeneration of scrub at lower altitudes. The island's cloudy, highly oceanic climate appears to offset increasing summer warmth, and scrubline is likely to rise only if clearer and less windy, as well as warmer, summers eventuate.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 2007

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