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Late Quaternary cycles of mangrove development and decline on the north Australian continental shelf

โœ Scribed by John Grindrod; Patrick Moss; Sander Van Der Kaars


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
329 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0267-8179

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โœฆ Synopsis


Mangrove communities in the Australian tropics presently occur as narrow belts of vegetation in estuaries and on sheltered, muddy coasts. Palynological data from continentalshelf and deep-sea cores indicate a long-term cyclical component of mangrove development and decline at a regional scale, which can be linked to specific phases of late Quaternary sealevel change. Extensive mangrove development, relative to today, occurs during periods of marine transgression, whereas very diminished mangrove occurs during marine regressions and during rarer periods of relative sea-level stability. Episodes of flourishing mangrove cannot be linked to phases of humid climate, as has been suggested in studies elsewhere. Rather, the cycle of expansion and decline of mangrove communities on a grand scale is explained in terms of contrasting physiographic settings characteristic of continental-shelf coasts during transgressive and regressive phases, in particular by the existence, or lack, of well-developed tidal estuaries.


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