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      Tropical Peat and Peatland Development in the Floodplains of the Greater Pamba Basin, South-Western India during the Holocene

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          Abstract

          Holocene sequences in the humid tropical region of Kerala, South-western (SW) India have preserved abundance of organic—rich sediments in the form of peat and its rapid development in a narrow time frame towards Middle Holocene has been found to be significant. The sub—coastal areas and flood plains of the Greater Pamba Basin have provided palaeorecords of peat indicating that the deposits are essentially formed within freshwater. The combination of factors like stabilized sea level and its subsequent fall since the Middle Holocene, topographic relief and climatic conditions led to rapid peat accumulation across the coastal lowlands. The high rainfall and massive floods coupled with a rising sea level must have inundated > 75% of the coastal plain land converting it into a veritable lagoon—lake system that eventually led to abrupt termination of the forest ecosystem and also converted the floodplains into peatland where accumulation of peat almost to 2.0–3.0 m thickness in coastal lowlands and river basins during the shorter interval in the Middle Holocene. Vast areas of the coastal plains of Kerala have been converted into carbon rich peatland during the Middle Holocene and transforming the entire coastal stretch and associated landforms as one of the relatively youngest peatlands in the extreme southern tip of India. Unlike the uninterrupted formation of peatlands of considerable extent during the Holocene in Southeast Asia, the south Peninsular Indian region has restricted and short intervals of peatlands in the floodplains and coastal lowlands. Such a scenario is attributed to the topographic relief of the terrain and the prevailing hydrological regimes and environmental conditions as a consequence of monsoon variability since Middle Holocene in SW India. Considering the tropical coastal lowlands and associated peatlands are excellent repositories of carbon, they are very important for regional carbon cycling and habitat diversity. The alarming rate of land modification and development is destabilizing these carbon pools resulting in large scale carbon emissions to the atmosphere and loss of low-latitude peat palaeorecords. Therefore, these palaeorecords are to be conserved and addressed for better understanding and utilizing the carbon pool for effective climate change adaptation. This communication is the first attempt of addressing the peat formation and peatland development during the Holocene from the tropical region of Peninsular India.

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          Asynchronous terrestrial and marine signals of climate change during Heinrich events.

          Tropical regions have been reported to play a key role in climate dynamics. To date, however, there are uncertainties in the timing and the amplitude of the response of tropical ecosystems to millennial-scale climate change. We present evidence of an asynchrony between terrestrial and marine signals of climate change during Heinrich events preserved in marine sediment cores from the Brazilian continental margin. The inferred time lag of about 1000 to 2000 years is much larger than the ecological response to recent climate change and appears to be related to the nature of hydrological changes.
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            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Role: Editor
            Journal
            PLoS One
            PLoS ONE
            plos
            plosone
            PLoS ONE
            Public Library of Science (San Francisco, CA USA )
            1932-6203
            10 May 2016
            2016
            : 11
            : 5
            : e0154297
            Affiliations
            [1 ]Biodiversity and Palaeobiology Group, Palynology and Palaeoclimate Laboratory, Agharkar Research Institute, Pune—411004, India
            [2 ]National Centre for Earth Science Studies, Thuruvaikkal P.O., Thiruvananthapuram—695011, Kerala, India
            [3 ]Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Ecology (ZMT), Biogeochemistry and Geology, Bremen—28359, Germany
            Institute of Botany, CHINA
            Author notes

            Competing Interests: The authors have no competing interests.

            Conceived and designed the experiments: NKPK DP RBL TJ. Performed the experiments: DP RBL VMS TJ PGG. Analyzed the data: NKPK DP RBL TJ. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: DP RBL TJ VMS PGG. Wrote the paper: NKPK DP RBL. Field work and collection: NKPK DP VMS.

            Author information
            http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3304-7898
            Article
            PONE-D-16-00903
            10.1371/journal.pone.0154297
            4862630
            27163658
            b15c66d3-cb2b-4b5e-9ae4-1a5772b45ea1
            © 2016 Kumaran et al

            This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

            History
            : 12 January 2016
            : 12 April 2016
            Page count
            Figures: 6, Tables: 5, Pages: 21
            Funding
            The authors received no specific funding for this work. However, KPNK thanks the CSIR, HRDG for its support in the form of ES project [21(0828)/10/EMR-II] and financial support in the form of Women Scientist Scheme (SR/WOS-A/ES-08/2013) to RBL by the DST is acknowledged. VMS acknowledges Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi for Senior Research Fellowship [09/909(0005)/2012-EMR–I]. Financial assistance towards part of the publication fee has been provided by the Director Agharkar Research Institute, Pune, India.
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            Earth Sciences
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            Petrology
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