Author:
Bunting Mairi Jane,Farrell Michelle
Abstract
Relative Pollen Productivity is an essential parameter for quantitative reconstruction of past land cover from pollen records, but published studies have produced a range of different values for the same taxa. Heathland habitats have limited plant diversity and strong spatial patterning, therefore are useful case studies to investigate aspects of pollen dispersal and deposition, but the estimated spatial area “sensed” by pollen records in these habitats also varies widely between studies. In this study, we estimate pollen productivity from two different microhabitats in a heathland ecosystem in order to investigate the role of local environmental conditions in any observed differences. Vegetation survey was carried out using the Crackles Bequest Project method, pollen assemblages from moss samples counted using standard methods, and relative pollen productivity and estimated source area derived using Extended R-Value analysis. Analysis of the data suggests that at least two pollen source areas exist at the sites studied, reflecting scales of landscape organisation. Microhabitat does not appear to have a marked effect on estimates of Relative Pollen Productivity in this heathland system. This study confirms earlier findings that the estimates obtained for some taxa from heathlands are substantially different than those from agricultural landscapes, especially Poaceae. The findings suggest that the factors controlling Relative Pollen Productivity are still not fully understood, and that differences between locations may reflect real, habitat-led differences. Further investigation of this parameter, which is central to reconstruction of past land cover from pollen records whether overtly incorporated via an algebraic model or less explicitly present via ecological narrative, biomisation or modern analog approaches, is clearly necessary.
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference47 articles.
1. The role of mosses in modern pollen analysis: the influence of moss morphology on pollen entrapment.;Boyd;Pollen Spores,1986
2. Pollen productivity estimates of key European plant taxa for quantitative reconstruction of past vegetation: a review.;Broström;Veg. Hist. Archaeobot.,2008
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献