skip to content skip to navigtion accessibility statement

New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts


Holocene forest fires in the upper Clutha district, Otago, New Zealand

PETER WARDLE

Landcare Research
P.O. Box 69
Lincoln, New Zealand

Abstract  Surveyors' maps and descriptions show that the extent of tall forest in the upper Clutha district was almost the same at the beginning of European settlement in the 1850s as it is today. Since the 1850s fires in non-forest vegetation have burnt up to forest boundaries, but in the one locality where a large block of Nothofagus forest was burnt (about 1891), succession towards podocarp woodland is now advanced. Totara (Podocarpus hallii) logs were abundant on mountain sides down-valley from existing forests at the time of European settlement. Radiocarbon dates range between 730 and 1200 yr BP, with the younger dates likely to be closest to the time of destruction of the trees. Charcoal occurs on slopes where soil movement after fire has led to burial and preservation, and in alluvial fans and terraces. It is most frequent between altitudes of 300 and 1000 m, and depths of 20-40 cm. None was found where annual precipitation exceeds 3600 mm, very little where it is less than 450 mm, and none within existing forest except close to margins. Fragments were identified as angiosperm or podocarp. Nothofagus and six other angiosperm genera were confidently distinguished. Six species of podocarp were separated, though usually as probable rather than definitive identifications; most were identified as Phyllocladus alpinus, but Prumnopitys taxifolia, Halocarpus, and Podocarpus also occur. Podocarp charcoal is widely distributed through the district, usually dispersed through the subsoil, and ranges in age from 860 to 8490 years BP. Nothofagus charcoal is most abundant near surviving Nothofagus stands, often as substantial pockets. One sample was dated at 3830 years BP, whereas the remainder date at 1620 years BP or younger. Charcoal of Kunzea ericoides and/or Leptospermum scoparium, which usually grow as fire-induced stands, dated to as old as 3420 years. Charcoal and totara logs dated between 430 and 860 years BP, together with abundant undated material with similar stratigraphy, indicate burning within the period of Maori presence.

Keywords  beech; celery pine; charcoal; fire; logs; podocarp; radiocarbon; totara

B00022
Received 22 June 2000; accepted 22 May 2001

New Zealand Journal of Botany, 2001, Vol. 39: 523-542

0028-825X/01/3903-0523 $7.00 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 2001

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (2321K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


This year's abstracts | Journal home page | All abstracts | Publishing home page

© The Royal Society of New Zealand
MoST Content Management V3.0.3671