Ecological changes on SGang Gwaay over the last millennium: uncovering forest changes and avian activity with respect to human settlement and invasive species

Haida Gwaii (British Columbia) is an archipelago of immense cultural importance to the Haida people and ecological importance for breeding seabirds. In the past millennia, the islands were exposed to multiple stressors (e.g., Indigenous use of the land, European colonisation, invasive species introd...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zvezdin, Alexandra Catalina
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/16021/
https://research.library.mun.ca/16021/1/converted.pdf
Description
Summary:Haida Gwaii (British Columbia) is an archipelago of immense cultural importance to the Haida people and ecological importance for breeding seabirds. In the past millennia, the islands were exposed to multiple stressors (e.g., Indigenous use of the land, European colonisation, invasive species introduction), thus its ecosystems are likely to have changed greatly; however, historical ecosystem trends are unknown and drivers of change difficult to unveil with contemporary field monitoring programs alone. Archeological and anthropological accounts provide short time-scale knowledge about past vegetation and seabird monitoring programs date back to the ~1980s. Thus, understanding long-term cycles of seabird population decline and increase is difficult with these short time-scale and punctual data. This thesis addresses the lack of knowledge regarding ecosystem changes over millennia using a multi-proxy paleoecological approach to reconstruct past ecosystems of SGang Gwaay, Haida Gwaii and uncover vegetation and wildlife changes as they relate to anthropogenic activities at the former Haida settlement of Nintints (UNESCO world heritage site). With a dated sediment core (based on ²¹⁰Pb and ¹⁴C), our results revealed vegetation and seabird changes occurring ov¹er ~1300 years. After the expansion of the Haida population at Ninstints c.a. 1235 CE, terrestrial vegetation declines, particularly with increased harvest of Western red cedar. This decline in vegetation is reflected by a decrease in plant sterols and stanols (sitosterol, stigmastanol), a decrease in lake-water TOC, C/N and δ¹³C values. This decrease in terrestrial vegetation persists for ~800 years following human settlement expansion and is followed by an increase in chlorophyll a, increase in alagal sterols (campesterol, sitosterol/campesterol), increase pond microbial activity (shift in sitosterol/stigmastanol), and changes in diatom assemblages. Dominant diatom taxa post settlement expansion are indicative of increased lake-water turbulence, increased light ...