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Featured researches published by Encarni Montoya.


Journal of Ecology | 2014

Looking forward through the past : identification of 50 priority research questions in palaeoecology

Alistair W. R. Seddon; Anson W. Mackay; Ambroise G. Baker; H. John B. Birks; Elinor Breman; Caitlin E. Buck; Erle C. Ellis; Cynthia A. Froyd; Jacquelyn L. Gill; Lindsey Gillson; E. A. Johnson; Vivienne J. Jones; Stephen Juggins; Marc Macias-Fauria; Keely Mills; Jesse L. Morris; David Nogués-Bravo; Surangi W. Punyasena; Thomas P. Roland; Andrew J. Tanentzap; Katherine J. Willis; Eline N. van Asperen; William E. N. Austin; Rick Battarbee; Shonil A. Bhagwat; Christina L. Belanger; Keith Bennett; Hilary H. Birks; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Stephen J. Brooks

Summary 1. Priority question exercises are becoming an increasingly common tool to frame future agendas in conservation and ecological science. They are an effective way to identify research foci that advance the field and that also have high policy and conservation relevance. 2. To date there has been no coherent synthesis of key questions and priority research areas for palaeoecology, which combines biological, geochemical and molecular techniques in order to reconstruct past ecological and environmental systems on timescales from decades to millions of years. 3. We adapted a well-established methodology to identify 50 priority research questions in palaeoecology. Using a set of criteria designed to identify realistic and achievable research goals, we selected questions from a pool submitted by the international palaeoecology research community and relevant policy practitioners. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Accepted Article 4. The integration of online participation, both before and during the workshop, increased international engagement in question selection. 5. The questions selected are structured around six themes: human–environment interactions in the Anthropocene; biodiversity, conservation, and novel ecosystems; biodiversity over long timescales; ecosystem processes and biogeochemical cycling; comparing, combining and synthesizing information from multiple records; and new developments in palaeoecology. 6. Future opportunities in palaeoecology are related to improved incorporation of uncertainty into reconstructions, an enhanced understanding of ecological and evolutionary dynamics and processes, and the continued application of long-term data for better-informed landscape management. 7. Synthesis Palaeoecology is a vibrant and thriving discipline and these 50 priority questions highlight its potential for addressing both pure (e.g. ecological and evolutionary, methodological) and applied (e.g. environmental and conservation) issues related to ecological science and global change.


Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2018

Ecological consequences of post-Columbian indigenous depopulation in the Andean–Amazonian corridor

Nicholas J.D. Loughlin; William D. Gosling; Patricia Mothes; Encarni Montoya

European colonization of South America instigated a continental-scale depopulation of its indigenous peoples. The impact of depopulation on the tropical forests of South America varied across the continent. Furthermore, the role that indigenous peoples played in transforming the biodiverse tropical forests of the Andean–Amazonian corridor before ad 1492 remains unknown. Here, we reconstruct the past 1,000 years of changing human impact on the cloud forest of Ecuador at a key trade route, which connected the Inkan Empire to the peoples of Amazonia. We compare this historical landscape with the pre-human arrival (around 44,000–42,000 years ago) and modern environments. We demonstrate that intensive land-use within the cloud forest before European arrival deforested the landscape to a greater extent than modern (post-ad 1950) cattle farming. Intensive indigenous land-use ended abruptly around ad 1588 following a catastrophic population decline. Forest succession then took around 130 years to establish a structurally intact forest—one comparable to that which occurred before the arrival of the first humans to the continent. We show that nineteenth-century descriptions of the Andean–Amazonian corridor as a pristine wilderness record a shifted ecological baseline—one that less than 250 years earlier had consisted of a heavily managed and cultivated landscape.Palaeoenvironmental analysis reveals the ecological history of the Andean–Amazonian corridor, where European colonization resulted in depopulation, land-use decline and forest succession such that by the nineteenth century the region came to be seen as a pristine natural environment.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Long-Term Vegetation Dynamics in a Megadiverse Hotspot: The Ice-Age Record of a Pre-montane Forest of Central Ecuador.

Encarni Montoya; Hayley F. Keen; Carmen X. Luzuriaga; William D. Gosling

Tropical ecosystems play a key role in many aspects of Earth system dynamics currently of global concern, including carbon sequestration and biodiversity. To accurately understand complex tropical systems it is necessary to parameterise key ecological aspects, such as rates of change (RoC), species turnover, dynamism, resilience, or stability. To obtain a long-term (>50 years) perspective on these ecological aspects we must turn to the fossil record. However, compared to temperate zones, collecting continuous sedimentary archives in the lowland tropics is often difficult due to the active landscape processes, with potentially frequent volcanic, tectonic, and/or fluvial events confounding sediment deposition, preservation, and recovery. Consequently, the nature, and drivers, of vegetation dynamics during the last glacial are barely known from many non-montane tropical landscapes. One of the first lowland Amazonian locations from which palaeoecological data were obtained was an outcrop near Mera (Ecuador). Mera was discovered, and analysed, by Paul Colinvaux in the 1980s, but his interpretation of the data as indicative of a forested glacial period were criticised based on the ecology and age control. Here we present new palaeoecological data from a lake located less than 10 km away from Mera. Sediment cores raised from Laguna Pindo (1250 masl; 1°27′S, 78°05′W) have been shown to span the late last glacial period [50–13 cal kyr BP (calibrated kiloyears before present)]. The palaeoecological information obtained from Laguna Pindo indicate that the region was characterised by a relatively stable plant community, formed by taxa nowadays common at both mid and high elevations. Miconia was the dominant taxon until around 30 cal kyr BP, when it was replaced by Hedyosmum, Asteraceae and Ilex among other taxa. Heat intolerant taxa including Podocarpus, Alnus, and Myrica peaked around the onset of the Last Glacial Maximum (c. 21 cal kyr BP). The results obtained from Laguna Pindo support Colinvaux’s hypothesis that glacial cooling resulted in a reshuffling of taxa in the region but did not lead to a loss of the forest structure. Wide tolerances of the plant species occurring to glacial temperature range and cloud formation have been suggested to explain Pindo forest stability. This scenario is radically different than the present situation, so vulnerability of the tropical pre-montane forest is highlighted to be increased in the next decades.


Perspectives in Plant Ecology Evolution and Systematics | 2013

Ecological palaeoecology in the neotropical Gran Sabana region: Long-term records of vegetation dynamics as a basis for ecological hypothesis testing

Valentí Rull; Encarni Montoya; Sandra Nogué; Teresa Vegas-Vilarrúbia; Elisabet Safont


Climate of The Past | 2016

Climate variability and human impact in South America during the last 2000 years: synthesis and perspectives from pollen records

S.G.A. Flantua; H. Hooghiemstra; Mathias Vuille; Hermann Behling; John F. Carson; William D. Gosling; Isabel Hoyos; Marie-Pierre Ledru; Encarni Montoya; Francis E. Mayle; A. Maldonado; Valentí Rull; M. S. Tonello; Bronwen S. Whitney; C. González-Arango


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2014

A statistical sub-sampling tool for extracting vegetation community and diversity information from pollen assemblage data

Hayley F. Keen; William D. Gosling; Felix Hanke; Charlotte S. Miller; Encarni Montoya; Bryan G. Valencia; Joseph J. Williams


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2015

New insights on palaeofires and savannisation in northern South America

Valentí Rull; Encarni Montoya; Teresa Vegas-Vilarrúbia; Tania Ballesteros


Climate of The Past Discussions | 2015

Climate variability and human impact on the environment in South America during the last 2000 years: synthesis and perspectives

S.G.A. Flantua; H. Hooghiemstra; M. Vuillle; Hermann Behling; John F. Carson; William D. Gosling; Isabel Hoyos; Marie-Pierre Ledru; Encarni Montoya; Francis E. Mayle; A. Maldonado; V. Rull; Tonello; B.S. Whiyney; C. González-Arango


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2018

Landscape-scale drivers of glacial ecosystem change in the montane forests of the eastern Andean flank, Ecuador

Nicholas J.D. Loughlin; William D. Gosling; Angela L. Coe; Pauline Gulliver; Patricia Mothes; Encarni Montoya


Past Global Changes Magazine | 2017

Paleoecology as a guide to landscape conservation and restoration in the neotropical Gran Sabana

Valentí Rull; Teresa Vegas-Vilarrúbia; Encarni Montoya

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Valentí Rull

Spanish National Research Council

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Patricia Mothes

National Technical University

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Stephen J. Brooks

American Museum of Natural History

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