Artigo Revisado por pares

Historia de la vegetación del Holoceno de la laguna Hinojales, sudeste de la provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina

2002; Asociación Paleontológica Argentina; Volume: 39; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1851-8044

Autores

Silvina Stutz, Aldo R. Prieto, Federico Ignacio Isla,

Tópico(s)

Plant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics

Resumo

Pollen data from Hinojales pond (37'34' S; 57'27' W) provide new information about the vegetational, hydrological and climatological history of the Pampa grasslands since the Middle Holocene. A freshwater pond developed since ea, 4,500 yr B.P. Fluctuations in the relative abundance and concentration of aquatic pollen types simultaneously with lithological changes suggest variation in local hydrological conditions during the entire period studied. Between ea, 4,500 and 3,300 C yr B.P. the pond was situated in an environment dominated by a halophytic plant community that developed after the sea reached the pond during the marine transgressive maximum. Since ea. 3,300 C yr B.P. a freshwater plant community and a broader open water began to develop. A paludal and submerged hydrophitic community without modern analogues prevailed between ea. 2,100 and 400 C yr B.P. An increase in deep water elements (Myriophyllum and Pediastrumi suggests a larger and deeper water body. During this stage, the pond expanded at several episodes, related to increase in precipitation. After ca. 400 C yr B,P. there was a reduction of the water body and a pond similar to present one began to develop within dryer conditions. The pollen record from the top of the sequence points out that present freshwater plant communities became installed recently. Vegetation history of the Hinojales pond indicates that it was active since Middle Holocene and that its origin is not related to modern processes.

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