Rapid vegetation reorganization in Hengduan Mountains driven by high climatic oscillations

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Abstract

The accelerating global climate change has been triggering large-scale vegetation reorganizations, yet our understanding of how mountain ecosystems respond to rapid climatic oscillations is critically constrained. Here, we present a high-resolution palynological record from Erhai Lake, southwestern China, revealing eight episodes of rapid vegetation reorganizations in the Hengduan Mountains (HMs) over the past 35,200 years. These reorganizations closely tracked the rhythms of rapid climate oscillations, particularly during the Last Glacial Maximum and the Last Deglacial Period. We find that while the timing of rapid vegetation reorganizations were synchronous with Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) anomalies that modulated global climate variability, the magnitude of these reorganizations did not exhibit a linear correlation with AMOC strength; instead, they were governed by local heat and moisture availability mediated through teleconnections. This demonstrates a strong natural regulatory capacity of mountain vegetation in HMs, enabling resilience to intense climatic fluctuations. However, when using the Erhai record as a benchmark, we project that rapid reorganizations under the high-emission pathway (SSP585) will likely surpass the intensities observed during historical events. These findings reveal the high climatic sensitivity and strong natural regulatory capacity of mountain ecosystems, highlighting the critical necessity of climate mitigation actions and nature-based solutions to safeguard subalpine and alpine biodiversity against unprecedented future climate change.

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