학술논문

Late Holocene anthropogenic landscape change in northwestern Europe impacted insect biodiversity as much as climate change did after the last Ice Age
Document Type
Source
Swedish Lifewatch Swedish Biodiversity Data Infrastructure SEAD Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Biological Sciences. 289(1977)
Subject
Insects
landscape
biodiversity
climate change
human impact
Entomology
entomologi
environmental change
miljöförändringar
environmental archaeology
miljöarkeologi
environmental science
miljövetenskap
Mathematics
matematik
Quarternary Geology
kvartärgeologi
Language
English
ISSN
0962-8452
1471-2954
Abstract
Since the last Ice Age (ca 115 000–11 700 years ago), the geographical ranges of most plants and animals have shifted, expanded or contracted. Understanding the timing, geographical patterns and drivers of past changes in insect communities is essential for evaluating the biodiversity implications of future climate changes, yet our knowledge of long-term patterns is limited. We applied a network modelling approach to the recent fossil record of northwestern European beetles to investigate how their taxonomic and trait composition changed during the past 16 000 years. We found two major changes in beetle faunas 4000–3500 and 10 000–9500 years ago, coinciding with periods of human population growth in the Late Holocene and climate warming in the Early Holocene. Our results demonstrate that humans have affected insect biodiversity since at least the introduction of agropastoralism, with landscape-scale effects that can be observed at sites away from areas of direct human impact.