Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-mwx4w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-21T04:44:43.246Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Vegetation Change in the Coastal-Lowland Rainforest at Avai'o'vuna Swamp, Vava'u, Kingdom of Tonga

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Patricia L. Fall*
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-0104, USA

Abstract

Avai'o'vuna Swamp, a small coastal wetland in Vava'u, Kingdom of Tonga, produced a 4500-year pollen and sediment record. Results are: (1) a mid-Holocene sea level highstand is confirmed for Tonga between about 4500 and 2600 14C yr B.P.; marine clay contains pollen from mangroves (Rhizophora mangle), coastal forest trees (Barringtonia asiatica and Cocos nucifera), and rainforest trees (Alphitonia, Rhus, Hedycarya and Calophyllum). (2) Microscopic charcoal first appeared at 2600 14C yr B.P., coincident with the arrival of Polynesians. (3) Cocos, Pandanus, Excoecaria, Macaranga, and Elaeocarpaceae pollen reflects the establishment of a mixed coastal-lowland rainforest in the last 2500 years. (4) The loss of Hedycarya, Elaeocarpus, Calophyllum, and Guettarda and the reduction of Terminalia and taxa in the Papilionaceae family by about 1000 years ago may be due to habitat destruction and the loss of dispersal capabilities of some species through the extinction of the two largest pigeons in Tonga.

Type
Short Papers
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Athens, J.S., Ward, J.V., and Wickler, S. (1992). Late Holocene lowland vegetation, Oahu Hawaii. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology 14, 934.Google Scholar
K.D., Bennett (1998). Psimpoll 4.10 and Pscomb 1.03 - C programs for plotting pollen diagrams and analysing pollen data. http://www.kv.geo.uu.se/psimpoll_manual/4.00/psimpoll.htm.Google Scholar
Burley, D.V. (1994). Settlement pattern and Tongan prehistory reconsiderations from Ha'apai. Journal of Polynesian Society 103, 379411.Google Scholar
Burley, D.V. (1998). Tongan archaeology and the Tongan past, 2850–150 BP. Journal of World Prehistory 12, 337392.Google Scholar
Burley, D.V., and Dickinson, W.R. (2001). Origin and significance of a founding settlement in Polynesia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98, 1182911831.Google Scholar
Burley, D.V., Nelson, E., Shutler, R. Jr.(1999). A radiocarbon chronology for the Eastern Lapita frontier in Tonga. Archaeology in Oceania 34, 5970.Google Scholar
Burley, D.V., Dickinson, W.R., Barton, A., Shutler, R. Jr.(2001). Lapita on the periphery: new data on old problems in the Kingdom of Tonga. Archaeology in Oceania 34, 5970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, J.A., and Lingle, C.S. (1979). Predicted relative sea level changes (18,000 years B.P. to present) caused by late-glacial retreat of the Antarctic ice sheet. Quaternary Research 11, 279298.Google Scholar
Clark, J.A., Farrell, W.E., and Peltier, W.R. (1978). Global changes in postglacial sea level: a numerical calculation. Quaternary Research 9, 265287.Google Scholar
Dickinson, W.R. (2001). Paleoshoreline record of relative Holocene sea levels on Pacific islands. Earth-Science Reviews 55, 191234.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickinson, W.R. (2003). Impact of mid-Holocene hydro-isostatic highstand in regional sea level on habitability of islands in Pacific Oceania. Journal of Coastal Research 19, 489502.Google Scholar
Dickinson, W.R., Burley, D.V., Shutler, R. Jr.(1994). Impact of hydro-static Holocene sea-level change on the geological context of island archaeological sites. Geoarchaeology 9, 1185.Google Scholar
Drake, D.R., Whistler, W.A., Motley, T.J., and Imada, C.T. (1996). Rain forest vegetation of ′Eua Island, Kingdom of Tonga. New Zealand Journal of Botany 34, 6577.Google Scholar
Ellison, J.C. (1989). Pollen analysis of mangrove sediments as a sea-level indicator–assessment from Tongatapu, Tonga. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 74, 327341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellison, J.C. (1994). Paleo-lake and swamp stratigraphic records of Holocene vegetation and sea-level changes, Mangaia, Cook Islands. Pacific Science 48, 115.Google Scholar
Faegri, K., and Iversen, J. (1989). Textbook of Pollen Analysis.4th ed. Wiley, Chichester.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., and King, S.M. (1984). Late Quaternary pollen records from Easter Island. Nature 307, 4750.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., Hannan, C.T., and Farelly, M.J. (1999). Final report on the stratigraphy and palynology of swamps on the islands of Ha'afeva and Foa, Ha'apai, Tonga. Massey University, Geography Programme Miscellaneous Publication Series 99/3 Palmerston, New Zealand.Google Scholar
Fosberg, F.R. (1963). Man's Place in the Island Ecosystem. Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu.Google Scholar
Franklin, J. (2003). Regeneration and growth of pioneer and shade-tolerant rain forest trees in Tonga. New Zealand Journal of Botany 41, 669684.Google Scholar
Franklin, J., Drake, D.R., Bolick, L.A., Smith, D.S., and Motley, T.J. (1999). Rain forest composition and patterns of secondary succession in the Vava'u Island group, Tonga. Journal of Vegetation Science 10, 5164.Google Scholar
Hope, G.S., and Pask, J. (1998). Tropical vegetational change in the late Pleistocene of New Caledonia. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 142, 121.Google Scholar
Hope, G.S., O'Dea, D., and Southern, W. (1999). Holocene vegetation histories in the Western Pacific–alternative records of human impact.Lilley, I., Galipaud, J.-C. The Pacific from 5000 to 2000 BP. Colonisation and Transformations Orstom Publishing, Paris.575 Google Scholar
Kirch, P.V. (1994). The Wet and the Dry: Irrigation and Agricultural Intensification in Polynesia. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Kirch, P.V. (1996). Late Holocene human-induced modifications to a central Pacific island ecosystem. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 93, 52965300.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kirch, P.V. (1997). The Lapita Peoples: Ancestors of the Oceanic World. Blackwell, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kirch, P.V., and Ellison, J.C. (1994). Paleoenvironmental evidence for human colonization of remote Oceanic islands. Antiquity 68, 310321.Google Scholar
Kirch, P.V., Steadman, D.W., Butler, V.L., Hather, J., and Weisler, M.I. (1995). Prehistory and human ecology in Eastern Polynesia: excavations at Tangatatau Rockshelter, Mangaia, Cook Islands. Archaeology in Oceania 30, 4765.Google Scholar
Koopman, K.F., and Steadman, D.W. (1995). Extinction and biogeography of bats on 'Eua, Kingdom of Tonga. American Museum Novitates 3125, 113.Google Scholar
MacArthur, R., and Wilson, E.O. (1967). The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
McConkey, K.R., and Drake, D.R. (2002). Extinct pigeons and declining bat populations: are large seeds still being dispersed in the tropical pacific?.Levey, D., Silva, W., Galetti, M. Frugivory and Seed Dispersal: Evolutionary and Conservation Perspectives CAB International, Wallingford.381395.Google Scholar
Meehan, H.J., McConkey, K.R., and Drake, D.R. (2002). Potential disruptions to seed dispersal mutualisms in Tonga, Western Polynesia. Journal of Biogeography 29, 695712.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miyata, T., Maeda, Y., Matsumoto, E., Matsushima, Y., Rodda, P., Sugimura, A., and Kayanne, H. (1990). Evidence for a Holocene high sea-level stand, Vanua Levu, Fiji. Quaternary Research 33, 352359.Google Scholar
Mueller-Dombois, D., and Fosberg, F.R. (1998). Vegetation of the Tropical Pacific islands. Springer-Verlag, New York.Google Scholar
Nunn, P.D. (1994). Oceanic Islands. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Olson, S.L., and James, H.F. (1982). Fossil birds from the Hawaiian Islands: evidence for wholesale extinction by man before Western contact. Science 217, 633635.Google Scholar
Park, G., and Whistler, A. (2001). The terrestrial ecology and botany of Tofua and Koa Islangs in Ha'apai, Kingdom of Tonga. Report of the botanical survey of the Ha'apai Conservation Area Project of the South Pacific Biodiversity Conservation Programme Google Scholar
Parkes, A. (1997). Environmental change and the impact of Polynesian colonization: sedimentary records from central Polynesia.Kirch, P.V., Hunt, T.L. Historical ecology in the Pacific islands: Prehistoric environmental and landscape change Yale Univ. Press, New Haven.166199.Google Scholar
Parkes, A., Flenely, J.R., and Teller, J.T. (1992). Environmental history of the Lake Vaihiria drainage basin, Tahiti, French Polynesia. Journal of Biogeography 19, 431447.Google Scholar
Poulsen, J. (1987). Early Tongan prehistory: the Lapita Period on Tongatapu and its relationships. Terra Australis 12(2, volumes, 307, 205. pp., Canberra.Google Scholar
Shutler, R. Jr., Burley, D.V., Dickinson, W.R., Nelson, E., and Carlson, A. (1994). Early Lapita sites: the colonization of Tonga and recent data from Northern Ha'apai. Archaeology in Oceania 29, 5368.Google Scholar
Southern, W., (1986). The late Quaternary environmental history of Fiji.Ph.D. Dissertation,Australian National University, Canberra.Google Scholar
Spriggs, M. (1997). The Island Melanesians. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Steadman, D.W. (1993). Biogeography of Tongan birds before and after human impact. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 90, 818822.Google Scholar
Steadman, D.W. (1995). Prehistoric extinctions of Pacific island birds: biodiversity meets zooarchaeology. Science 267, 11231131.Google Scholar
Steadman, D.W., Pregill, G.K., and Burley, D.V. (2002). Rapid prehistoric extinction of iguanas and birds in Polynesia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99, 36733677.Google Scholar
Stevenson, J. (1998). Human impact from the palaeoenvironmental record in New Caledonia.Galipaud, J.-C., Lilley, I. Le Pacifique de 5000 a 2000 BP: Supplements a l'Histoire d'une Colonisation Orstom, Noumea.251259.Google Scholar
Stevenson, J., Dodson, J.R., and Prosser, I.P. (2001). A late Quaternary record of environmental change and human impact from Plum Swamp, New Caledonia. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 168, 97123.Google Scholar
Taylor, F.W., and Bloom, A.L. (1977). Coral reefs on tectonic blocks, Tonga island arc. Proceedings of the third International Coral Reef Symposium 2, 275281.Google Scholar
Thompson, C.S. (1986). The climate and weather of Tonga. New Zealand Meteorological Service Miscellaneous Publication vol. 188, New Zealand Meteorological Service, Wellington.Google Scholar
Whistler, W.A. (1991). The ethnobotany of Tonga: the plants, their Tongan names, and their uses. Bernice P. Bishop Museum Series in Botany 2, 1155.Google Scholar
Whistler, W.A. (1992). Flowers of the Pacific Island Seashore : A Guide to the Littoral Plants of Hawai'i, Tahiti, Samoa, Tonga, Cook Islands, Fiji, and Micronesia. University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu.Google Scholar
Whistler, W.A. (2002). The Samoan Rainforest: A Guide to the Vegetation of the Samoan Archipelago Isle Botanica, Honolulu.Google Scholar
Whittaker, R.J., and Jones, S.H. (1994). The role of frugivorous bats and birds in the rebuilding of a tropical forest ecosystem, Krakatau, Indonesia. Journal of Biogeography 21, 245258.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yonekura, N., Ishii, T., Saito, Y., Maeda, Y., Matsushima, U., Matsumoto, E., and Kayanne, H. (1988). Holocene fringing reefs and sea-level hange in the Mangaia Island, southern Cook Islands. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, and Palaeoecology 68, 177188.Google Scholar