Takahara, Hikaru et al. (2010): Millennial-scale variability in vegetation records from the East Asian Islands; Taiwan, Japan and Sakhalin

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 184
ODP 184 1144
Identifier:
2012-050561
georefid

10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.11.026
doi

Creator:
Takahara, Hikaru
Kyoto Prefectural University, Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Kyoto, Japan
author

Igarashi, Yaeko
University of Bristol, United Kingdom
author

Hayashi, Ryoma
Institute for Paleoenvironment of Northern Regions, Japan
author

Kumon, Fujio
Shinshu University, Japan
author

Liew, Ping-Mei
National Taiwan University, Taiwan
author

Yamamoto, Masanobu
Hokkaido University, Japan
author

Kawai, Sayuri
author

Oba, Tadamichi
author

Irino, Tomohisa
author

Identification:
Millennial-scale variability in vegetation records from the East Asian Islands; Taiwan, Japan and Sakhalin
2010
In: Goni, Maria Fernanda Sanchez (editor), Harrison, Sandy P. (editor), Vegetation response to millennial-scale variability during the last glacial
Elsevier, International
29
21-22
2900-2917
High-resolution pollen records from Taiwan, Japan and Sakhalin document regional vegetation changes during Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) cycles during the last glacial. During the period from the cold phase (GS 18/19) to warm phase (D-O 19), the biome shift from temperate conifer forest to cold/cool conifer forest in Japan and from subtropical forest to temperate deciduous/conifer forest in Taiwan. The vegetation in D-O 17, cool mixed forest in central Japan, temperate deciduous broadleaf forest in western Japan and subtropical forest in Taiwan, indicates warm condition but not wet in all area. These vegetation changes lead to biome shift from MIS (Marine Isotope Stage) 4 to MIS 3. The abundance of Cryptomeria japonica and Fagus crenata in D-O 12 and D-O 8 indicates wet conditions brought by the strong summer monsoon through the Islands and high snowfall brought by the inflow of the Tsushima Warm Current into the Sea of Japan. The registration of other D-O warming events in MIS 3, although reflected by shifts in the abundance of key species, is not sufficient to produce changes in biomes. Development of cold deciduous forest in HS (Heinrich events) 1 in Sakhalin, Hokkaido and central Japan was conspicuous and was much larger than that in YD. Vegetation response in YD was small scale and within the same biome in the East Asian Islands. In D-O 1 at the termination of the last glacial, the same taxa that developed in the early Holocene, cold evergreen needleleaf trees in northern region, temperate deciduous broadleaf trees in central and western Japan, and warm-temperate evergreen trees in Taiwan, increased. Abstract Copyright (2010) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:20.0311
West:117.2508East: 117.2508
South:20.0311

Quaternary geology; Geochronology; absolute age; Asia; assemblages; C-14; carbon; Cenozoic; climate forcing; Commonwealth of Independent States; Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles; Far East; glaciation; isotopes; Japan; Leg 184; microfossils; millennial variations; miospores; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1144; orbital forcing; Pacific Ocean; paleoclimatology; paleoenvironment; palynomorphs; Pleistocene; pollen; quantitative analysis; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; Russian Federation; Sakhalin; Sakhalin Russian Federation; South China Sea; Taiwan; terrestrial environment; upper Pleistocene; vegetation; West Pacific;

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