Results/Conclusions
Results reveal large fluctuations in effective moisture and temperature over the past 8,000 years. Strikingly, the rapid expansion of P. mariana occurred during a period of severe moisture deficit (4500 – 4100 yrs BP), thus refuting the hypothesis that this vegetational change was caused by an increase in effective moisture. The invasion of P. mariana coincided with a transient climatic cooling that lasted ~900 years and centered at 4500 yr BP. P. mariana remained dominant in the regional forests throughout the following 4000 years despite marked fluctuations in effective moisture and temperature. Hence the establishment of P. mariana as a dominant species appears to have been triggered by summer cooling but was buffered from subsequent climatic variation. This apparent climatic insensitivity of P. mariana may be attributed to changes in soil thermal properties following P. mariana establishment, allowing the persistence of permafrost through late-Holocene climatic fluctuations, and hence leading to the widespread occurrence of moist to waterlogged soils. These results imply that local loss of permafrost in response to future warming will probably be a key factor to accelerate boreal-forest community changes.