William James Harvey

Summary of D.Phil/MSc research

An ever-increasing demand for agriculture while conserving biodiversity, maintaining livelihoods, and providing critical ecosystem services is one of the largest challenges for tropical land management across the Central American Isthmus today. Climatic and anthropogenic drivers currently provide the largest threats to changes in the vegetation cover and composition for this region therefore understanding the dynamics of these systems, their variability across space and through time is important for discerning current and future responses.

I utilised a number of palaeoecological proxies (fossil pollen, macroscopic charcoal, microscopic charcoal, Sporormiella, and diatoms) extracted from lake sediment cores, to explore the past drivers of vegetation dynamics across the Central American Isthmus with a focus on two of the most threatened forest biomes: (i) the mixed coniferous forests of upland Guatemala; and (ii) the dry broadleaf forests of lowland Nicaragua. I explored the role of fire and Pre-Columbian civilization in the mixed coniferous forests of upland Guatemala spanning the last 6000 years., followed by the impact of European contact from c.1500C.E. through to 2015C.E.; and in lowland Nicaragua I investigated the vulnerability and resilience of the dry tropical forests to known climatic and anthropogenic perturbations over the past c.1200-years.

My results demonstrate the state of knowledge for climate, burning, the spread of agrarian practices and the impacts these drivers have had upon the structure, composition and resilience of vegetation across space and through time. I found that while there were several homogenous climatic shifts most changes in precipitation were spatially and temporally heterogeneous. Increases in burning from 10000 – 2000B.C.E. are largely associated with climate, particularly between 7000-4000B.C.E. The relationship between climate and fire decoupled between 3000 – 2500B.C.E. as humans increasingly impacted land use through agrarian practices and lime production. I present evidence for the anthropogenic use of fire as the dominant driver of structure and compositional change in the mixed pine-oak forests of Guatemala during the Pre-Columbian Era, while domestic bovid grazing and logging was found to have suppressed hard-wood forest taxa recovery and regeneration since European contact. In the dry tropical forests of Nicaragua climate appears to have driven local fire; however, regular disturbance to this vegetation type appears to have made it very resilient against both climatic and anthropogenic disturbance through time, both pre and post European contact.

This thesis provides new information on the past ecological responses of two Central American forest types to climatic and anthropogenic disturbances spanning the Middle to Late and Late Holocene 4000B.C.E. – 2015C.E. Changes to the structure and composition of these forests in the past represent a globally important and largely understudied region, for which my thesis offers fundamental insights into its ecology and history.

Current Research/employment

Managing Partner/Founding Partner - Founded environmental consultancy LLP, focused on systematic evidence evaluations for robust identification of knowledge, advanced data collection, analysis, and reporting. Managing partner for business, legal, and finance.

Was your D.Phil relevant to what you are doing now?

Yes.

Publications

Harvey, W.J., Nogué, S., Stansell, N., Adolf, C., Long, P. R. and Willis, K.J, 2021. A palynological perspective on the impacts of European contact: Historic deforestation, ranching and agriculture surrounding the Cuchumatanes Highlands, Guatemala. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 30(3), pp.395-408. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-020-00790-2

Harvey, W. J., Petrokofsky, G., Stansell, N., Nogué, S., Petrokofsky, L. and Willis, K. J., 2021. Forests, Water, and Land Use Change across the Central American Isthmus: Mapping the Evidence Base for Terrestrial Holocene Palaeoenvironmental Proxies. Forests, 12(8), p.1057. https://doi.org/10.3390/f12081057

Petrokofsky, G., Hooper, O., Petrokofsky, L., Gant, A. E., Harvey, W. J. and Willis, K. J., 2021. What are the impacts of the wood pellet industry on biodiversity in Southeastern USA? A systematic evidence synthesis. Forest Ecology and Management, 483, p.118773. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118773

Petrokofsky, G., Harvey, W. J., Petrokofsky, L. and Ochieng, C. A., 2021. The Importance of Time-Saving as a Factor in Transitioning from Woodfuel to Modern Cooking Energy Services: A Systematic Map. Forests, 12(9), p.1149. https://doi.org/10.3390/f12091149

Jordon, M.W., Willis, K. J., Harvey, W. J., Petrokofsky, L., Petrokofsky, G., 2020. Implications of Temperate Agroforestry on Sheep and Cattle Productivity, Environmental Impacts and Enterprise Economics. A Systematic Evidence Map. Forests. 11(12):1321. https://doi.org/10.3390/f11121321

Stansell, N., Steinman, B.A., Lachniet, M.S., Harvey, W.J., Feller, J.R., Fernandez, A., Price, B., Boes, M., Willis, K.J. and Bosch, S.N., 2020. Stable Isotope, Pollen and Charcoal Records of Middle-to-Late Holocene Hydroclimate Variability from Lake Kail in the Western Guatemala Highlands. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 542. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116327

Harvey, W.J., Nogué, S., Stansell, N., Petrokofsky, G., Steinman, B. and Willis, K. J., 2019. The Legacy of Pre–Columbian Fire on the Pine–Oak Forests of Upland Guatemala. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, 2, p.34. https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2019.00034

Harvey, W.J., Stansell, N., Nogué, S., & Willis, K. J., 2019. The Apparent Resilience of the Dry Tropical Forests of the Nicaraguan Region of the Central American Dry Corridor to Variations in Climate Over the Last C. 1200 Years. Quaternary, 2(3), 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/quat2030025

Martin, A.C. and Harvey, W.J., 2017. The Global Pollen Project: a new tool for pollen identification and the dissemination of physical reference collections. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 8(7), pp.892-897. https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.12752

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