Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Brown, KJ, Fitton, RJ, Schoups, G, Allen, GB, Wahl, KA, Hebda, RJ 2006. Holocene precipitation in the coastal temperate rainforest complex of southern British Columbia, Canada. Quaternary Science Reviews, 25, 2762-2779.
Organization Royal BC Museum
URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379106001351
Abstract/Description or Keywords Pollen data from 69 surface samples from Vancouver Island, Canada, were used to develop a ratio index of precipitation, Douglas fir-western hemlock index (DWHI). DWHI ratios were combined with interpolated estimates of mean annual precipitation to develop pollen-based precipitation transfer functions. The optimal regression model, with a predictive range of 960–2600 mm, was applied to 10 Holocene lake sediment records distributed across a ∼150 km long coastal–inland precipitation gradient. Predicted precipitation was spatially modelled in a geographic information system to examine the spatio–temporal history of precipitation from this representative portion of the coastal temperate rainforest (CTR) complex of western North America. The reconstructions show widespread early Holocene dry conditions coupled with a steep east–west precipitation gradient. Thereafter, the modern precipitation gradient established 7000 years ago, illustrating that the CTR complex has experienced marked short-distance east–west changes in precipitation in the past. Changes in the abundance of arboreal and non-arboreal vegetation, as well as fire disturbance, are often concomitant with changes in Holocene precipitation. Given the precipitation and vegetation history of the region, conservation initiatives should focus on the moist outer coastal zone since it appears to have the greatest amount of resilience to perturbations in precipitation, whereas monitoring programs for signs of climate change should be initiated in central and eastern areas as they appear sensitive to changes in the moisture regime.
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Vancouver Island South, Vancouver Island North
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Richard Hebda
Contact Email [email protected]