Paper: Scheiter et al 2012

Title: Fire and fire-adapted vegetation promoted C4 expansion in the late Miocene

For a fuller description of the paper itself, go to the end of this web page.

Each simulation published in this paper corresponds to a unique 5 or 6 character code on the web pages.
The following table lists the name of the simulation as used in the paper, and the corresponding code name

The webpage gives you the ability to examine the published simulations, but you can also download the raw (netcdf) files to perform your own analysis. Detailed instructions on how to use the webpages and access the data can be found here: Using_BRIDGE_webpages.pdf

There are three simulations used in this paper, all for the late Miocene, but using different CO2 levels

You can have make you own analysis and plots by going here

Simulation Name as in PaperSimulation name on web pages
180 p.p.m. [CO2]atcztj
280 p.p.m. [CO2]atczth
400 p.p.m. [CO2]atczti


This is a fuller description of paper

This paper suggests that fire was a crucial driver for the expansion of C4 vegetation during the late Miocene

NameScheiter et al
Brief DescriptionThis paper suggests that fire was a crucial driver for the expansion of C4 vegetation during the late Miocene
Full Author ListSimon Scheiter, Steven I. Higgins, Colin P. Osborne, Catherine Bradshaw, Dan Lunt, Brad S. Ripley, Lyla L. Taylor, David J. Beerling
TitleFire and fire-adapted vegetation promoted C4 expansion in the late Miocene
Year2012
JournalNew Phytologist
Volume193
Issue3-4
Pages653-666
DOI10.1111/j.1469-8137.2012.04202.x
Contact's NameCatherine Bradshaw
Contact's emailC.Bradshaw@bristol.ac.uk
AbstractLarge proportions of the Earth's land surface are covered by biomes dominated by C(4) grasses. These C(4)-dominated biomes originated during the late Miocene, 3-8 million years ago (Ma), but there is evidence that C(4) grasses evolved some 20 Ma earlier during the early Miocene/Oligocene. Explanations for this lag between evolution and expansion invoke changes in atmospheric CO(2), seasonality of climate and fire. However, there is still no consensus about which of these factors triggered C(4) grassland expansion. We use a vegetation model, the adaptive dynamic global vegetation model (aDGVM), to test how CO(2), temperature, precipitation, fire and the tolerance of vegetation to fire influence C(4) grassland expansion. Simulations are forced with late Miocene climates generated with the Hadley Centre coupled ocean-atmosphere-vegetation general circulation model. We show that physiological differences between the C(3) and C(4) photosynthetic pathways cannot explain C(4) grass invasion into forests, but that fire is a crucial driver. Fire-promoting plant traits serve to expand the climate space in which C(4)-dominated biomes can persist. We propose that three mechanisms were involved in C(4) expansion: the physiological advantage of C(4) grasses under low atmospheric CO(2) allowed them to invade C(3) grasslands; fire allowed grasses to invade forests; and the evolution of fire-resistant savanna trees expanded the climate space that savannas can invade.