Responsable
Hugo Asselin
Collaborateurs
Yves Bergeron, Adam A. Ali, Sébastien Joannin, Mebarek Lamara
Étudiants
Marianne Vogel
Problématique
Lors de la déglaciation (entre 10 000 et 8000 ans avant aujourd’hui), l’Abitibi était recouverte par un lac proglaciaire (le lac Ojibway) duquel émergeaient des îles, qui sont aujourd’hui des collines. Le parc d’Aiguebelle inclut certaines de ces collines (paléo-îles) où se trouvent de petits lacs qui ont pu enregistrer la première migration de la végétation immédiatement après le retrait du glacier. L’histoire de la végétation contenue dans les sédiments de ces lacs pourrait différer de celle des lacs environnants.
Objectifs
Reconstituer l’histoire de la végétation et des feux sur les paléo-îles et comparer avec les autres reconstitutions régionales de sites plus jeunes qui étaient submergées durant l’épisode du lac Ojibway.
Méthodologie
Des sédiments seront échantillonnés dans de petits lacs situés à plus de 400 m d’altitude, soit au-delà du niveau maximal du lac Ojibway. Dans les sédiments, les grains de pollen et les macrorestes végétaux seront recueillis, ainsi que les charbons de bois. Des analyses géochimiques et génétiques seront aussi réalisées sur les sédiments, qui seront datés au 14C afin d’obtenir une chronologie temporelle. Des analyses statistiques permettront d’identifier les changements dans la végétation et dans la fréquence des feux et ainsi de reconstituer l’histoire du paysage entourant les lacs. Les résultats seront comparés aux chronologies obtenues ailleurs sur le territoire lors de travaux antérieurs.
Retombées escomptées
Le travail constituera une étude originale et unique permettant potentiellement de reconstituer la plus longue histoire de la région. Les résultats auront des retombées pratiques pour les activités d’interprétation au Parc national d’Aiguebelle et pour les objectifs d’aménagement forestier durable du Québec qui visent à maintenir les écosystèmes dans leurs limites de variabilité naturelle.
Applicabilité
Abitibi-Témiscamingue
Livrables
Marianne Vogel, Hugo Asselin, Sébastien Joannin, Yves Bergeron, Sabrina Leclercq, Cécile Latapy, Adam A. Ali. Early afforestation on islands of proglacial Lake Ojibway as evidence of post-glacial migration outposts. 2023. Holocene 975-985
DOI : 10.1177/09596836231169988
At the end of the last glacial period in the northern hemisphere, meltwater from receding ice sheets accumulated into large proglacial lakes, potentially limiting postglacial afforestation. We explored whether former islands of proglacial Lake Ojibway (Canada) (hilltops in the current landscape) could have acted as migration outposts and thus accelerated the postglacial migration. We extracted sediments from two small lakes located on “paleo-islands” and used XRF to detect changes in soil erosion and vegetation biomass. We also used plant macro-remains and wood charcoal to determine if (and which) tree species colonized the sites and to detect local fire events. Organic sediment accumulation started around 9657 and 9947 cal. yr BP at Lakes Perché and Despériers, respectively, before the level of Lake Ojibway started to decrease and liberate parts of the studied landscape ca 9400 cal. yr BP. Lithogenic elements (Ti, K, Sr, Fe, Zr, and Rb) decreased between the beginning of organic sediment accumulation and 8800–8700 cal. yr BP, indicating reduced soil erosion, possibly due to soil stabilization by vegetation. Then, the S/Ti ratio, a proxy of organic matter increased around 8800 and 8400 cal. yr BP. The earliest tree macro-remains (Larix laricina and Pinus spp.) were found between 9850 and 9500 cal. yr BP. Local fires were detected around 9820 and 8362 cal. yr BP. Early afforestation occurred on the islands of Lake Ojibway, 200 and 450 years before its level started to decrease, confirming that some islands acted as migratory outposts accelerating postglacial migration.
Marianne Vogel, Adam A. Ali, Sébastien Joannin, Yves Bergeron, Hugo Asselin. Postglacial vegetation migration facilitated by outposts on proglacial lake islands in eastern North America 2024. Quaternary Science Advances 100164
DOI : 10.1016/j.qsa.2024.100164
Postglacial vegetation colonization that followed ice retreat and proglacial lakes drainage in north-eastern America occurred rapidly, more rapidly than expected based on the modern dispersal capacities of boreal mixedwood trees. Paleo-islands from proglacial Lake Ojibway in Québec (Canada) were afforested early, before the final drainage of the lake. We hypothesized that these paleo-islands could have acted as outposts of migration and thus, could explain the rapid afforestation of lowlands observed. To determine if postglacial colonization occurred as a south-north front from the southern margin of Lake Ojibway or if islands acted as migration outposts, we estimated the date of first arrival of the main taxa of the current boreal mixedwood forest. We studied southern sites never covered by proglacial Lake Ojibway, sites that were islands within Lake Ojibway, and northern lowland sites that were liberated after the final drainage of proglacial Lake Ojibway. Taxa arrival was estimated as a sharp rise of the pollen percentage or as the occurrence of macro-remains within the sediments of small lakes dated with radiocarbon. Then we compared migration scenarios where colonization occurred gradually from south to north from the southern margin of proglacial Lake Ojibway and where paleo-islands of Lake Ojibway were first colonized through long-distance dispersal, thus becoming sources of seeds readily available to colonize lowland sites after the final drainage of Lake Ojibway. Finally, we compared the migration rates from the scenarios with the current mean dispersal capacities of the studied taxa. The migration rates estimated without taking the paleo-islands into account are too slow to explain the rapid afforestation observed following the final drainage of proglacial Lake Ojibway. Only the migration rates estimated from the scenarios with paleo-islands were comparable to the current mean dispersal capacity of the boreal mixedwood taxa. Thus, paleo-islands acted as stepping stones during postglacial migration, which explains why the lowlands were rapidly colonized. Larger paleo-islands and those located closer to the southern margin of the proglacial Lake were colonized first, in line with the theory of island biogeography.
Trois articles scientifiques et une thèse de doctorat (par articles).
Avancement
Une étudiante a été recrutée (Marianne Vogel) et a complété sa scolarité. Quatre lacs ont déjà été échantillonnés et les analyses en laboratoire sont en cours. Un premier article a été accepté pour publication dans The Holocene (2023), un deuxième sera soumis sous peu et un troisième est en cours de rédaction.
Organismes subventionnaires
Coopérative, MITACS
Financement annuel
Terminé
Durée
2020-2023
Dernière mise à jour :
2023-04-04 15:19:08