Ongoing and future anthropogenic climate change poses one of the greatest threats to biodiversity, affecting species distributions and ecological interactions. In the Amazon, climatic changes are expected to induce warming, disrupt precipitation patterns and of particular concern, to increase the intensity and frequency of droughts. Yet the response of ecosystems to intense warm, dry events is not well understood. In the Andes the mid‐Holocene dry event (MHDE),
Lake Pata, Brazilian Western Amazonia.
Terrestrial and aquatic plants.
We used pollen, charcoal, total organic carbon (TOC), total nitrogen (TN), δ13C and δ15N data from a new high‐resolution core that spans the last
We found that in the wettest section of Amazonia changes associated with the MHDE were detected in the geochemistry analysis but that vegetation changed very little in response to drought during the Holocene. This is the first high‐resolution core without apparent hiatuses that spans most of the Holocene (last 7,600 cal yr
The mid‐Holocene warming and reduced precipitation had a limited impact on western Amazonian forests. We attribute much of the resilience to a lack of fire in this system, and that if human‐set fires were to be introduced, the forest destruction from that cause would override that induced by climate alone.