Maize Cultivation Three Hundred Years Ago Triggered Severe Rocky Desertification in Southwest China

Author:

Yue Yuemin1ORCID,Hao Xiudong2,Wang Lu1ORCID,Yuan Shuai1ORCID,Ouyang Xuhong2,Zhang Xinbao3ORCID,Liu Hongyan4ORCID,Wang Kelin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory for Agro‐ecological Processes in Subtropical Region Institute of Subtropical Agriculture Chinese Academy of Sciences Changsha China

2. Key Laboratory of Environment Change and Resource Use in Beibu Gulf Nanning Normal University Nanning China

3. Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Chengdu China

4. College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the forest evolution is vital to answering the reforestation potential in karst areas. Here, we present the first‐ever pollen record in karst depression sediment, combined with comprehensive dating methods (137Cs, 210Pbex, and 14C) and historical documents, to reveal plant change history in southwest Guangxi, a severe rocky‐desertification region. We inferred three stages of “virgin forest–deforestation–sparse tree planting” over the past three centuries. Before the 1780s, the barren mountains used to be a lush mixed broadleaf forest probably. However, maize cultivation, along with explosive population growth and migration, accelerated mountain reclamation and deforestation, leading to severe rocky desertification since the 1780s, featured by the co‐occurrence of Zea pollen appearance and Dicranopteris spore surge from 0.92% to 12.18%. Since the 1930s, sparse tree planting began, as Cupressaceae/Taxodiaceae pollen abruptly increased by 32%. Our study is significant in understanding the rocky desertification causes and guiding ecological restoration in the region.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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