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Quaternary International | 2004

History of vegetation and habitat change in the Austral-Asian region

Geoffrey Hope; A. Peter Kershaw; Sander van der Kaars; Sun Xiangjun; Ping-Mei Liew; Linda E. Heusser; Hikaru Takahara; Matt S. McGlone; Norio Miyoshi; Patrick Moss

Over 1000 marine and terrestrial pollen diagrams and Some hundreds of vertebrate faunal sequences have been studied in the Austral-Asian region bisected by the PEPII transect, from the Russian arctic extending south through east Asia, Indochina, southern Asia, insular Southeast Asia (Sunda), Melanesia, Australasia (Sahul) and the western south Pacific. The majority of these records are Holocene but sufficient data exist to allow the reconstruction of the changing biomes over at least the past 200,000 years. The PEPII transect is free of the effects of large northern ice caps yet exhibits vegetational change in glacial cycles of a similar scale to North America. Major processes that can be discerned are the response of tropical forests in both lowlands and uplands to glacial cycles, the expansion of humid vegetation at the Pleistocene-Holocene transition and the change in faunal and vegetational controls as humans occupy the region. There is evidence for major changes in the intensity of monsoon and El Nino-Southern oscillation variability both on glacial-interglacial and longer time scales with much of the region experiencing a long-term trend towards more variable and/or drier climatic conditions. Temperature variation is most marked in high latitudes and high altitudes with precipitation providing the major climate control in lower latitude, lowland areas. At least some boundary shifts may be the response of vegetation to changing CO2 levels in the atmosphere. Numerous questions of detail remain, however, and current resolution is too coarse to examine the degree of synchroneity of millennial scale change along the transect


Global and Planetary Change | 1998

Vegetation change and terrestrial carbon storage in eastern Asia during the Last Glacial Maximum as indicated by a new pollen record from central Taiwan

Ping-Mei Liew; C.M. Kuo; Shu-Yue Huang; M.H. Tseng

Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) carbon storage in eastern Asia is a key issue for understanding the sinks and sources of paleocarbon. Palynological data with good time constraint for the LGM in a peat bog from a site at 650 m above mean sea level in central Taiwan, together with data from low-lying deltaic and basin deposits of Taiwan and South China, increase our understanding about vegetational evolution and possible terrestrial carbon storage in this area and probably eastern Asia. Contrasting to todays Machilus–Castanopsis forest zone around the peat bog, the vegetation before the LGM was dominated by Alnus, a relatively xerophytic element in Taiwan. An increase in herbs and decrease in spores during the LGM is recognized when compared with Holocene and modern assemblages. A less humid interval dominated by herbs (>50%) occurred between 21 and 15.8 ka. Basin deposits in northern Taiwan and deltaic deposits in central Taiwan show that during the LGM Artemisia, Umbelliferae and Gramineae were the main components contrasting with the Pinus or Cyclobalanopsis-dominant assemblages in the rest of the last glacial. Thus, less humid conditions lasted about 5000 to 6000 years in the LGM even on this very humid island. This may also be true in eastern Asia where a large area of the widely exposed continental shelf may have been occupied by grasslands and the uplands of South China were occupied by less dense coniferous or temperate forests during the LGM in contrast to the modern subtropical forest. This scenario improves our understanding of the terrestrial paleocarbon storage.


Journal of Biogeography | 2000

Palaeovegetation of China: a pollen data-based synthesis for the mid-Holocene and last glacial maximum

G. Yu; X.-D. Chen; Jian Ni; Rachid Cheddadi; Joël Guiot; Hongxiang Han; Sandy P. Harrison; C. Huang; M. Ke; Zhaochen Kong; Shuqiang Li; W. Li; Ping-Mei Liew; G. Liu; Jianquan Liu; Q. Liu; Kam-biu Liu; I. C. Prentice; W. Qui; G. Ren; C. Song; Shinya Sugita; X. Sun; Lizhou Tang; E. Van Campo; Y. Xia; Qinghai Xu; Shun Yan; Xiushuai Yang; J. Zhao


Quaternary International | 2006

Pollen stratigraphy, vegetation and environment of the last glacial and Holocene—A record from Toushe Basin, central Taiwan

Ping-Mei Liew; Shu-Yue Huang; Chao-Ming Kuo


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2006

Holocene thermal optimal and climate variability of East Asian monsoon inferred from forest reconstruction of a subalpine pollen sequence, Taiwan

Ping-Mei Liew; C.Y. Lee; C.M. Kuo


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2010

Millennial-scale variability in vegetation records from the East Asian Islands: Taiwan, Japan and Sakhalin

Hikaru Takahara; Yaeko Igarashi; Ryoma Hayashi; Fujio Kumon; Ping-Mei Liew; Masanobu Yamamoto; Sayuri Kawai; Tadamichi Oba; Tomohisa Irino


Quaternary International | 2004

Holocene tectonic uplift on the Hua-tung coast, eastern Taiwan

Meng-Long Hsieh; Ping-Mei Liew; Ming-Yang Hsu


Quaternary International | 2014

Recent 4000 years of climatic trends based on pollen records from lakes and a bog in Taiwan

Ping-Mei Liew; Meng-Huan Wu; Cheng-Yi Lee; Chiou-Lian Chang; Teh-Quei Lee


Quaternary International | 2004

An overview of coastal development in a Young Mountain Belt-Taiwan

Ping-Mei Liew; Meng-Long Hsieh; B.H. Shyu


Paläoklimaforschung | 1998

Biological records of climate change in lake sediments

Rw Battarbee; N. Davydova; G. Digerfeldt; M. Eronen; Marie-José Gaillard; A.-K. Gliemeroth; G. Hannon; Sandy P. Harrison; W. Hofmann; Ping-Mei Liew; André F. Lotter; H. Löffler; B. Marciniak; John P. Smol; Pavel E. Tarasov

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Ryoma Hayashi

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Rachid Cheddadi

University of Montpellier

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Shu-Yue Huang

National Taiwan University

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Hikaru Takahara

Kyoto Prefectural University

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