Paleoecological aspects of the Red Lake Peatland, northern Minnesota

The Red Lake Peatland, situated on the eastern arm of the Lake Agassiz plain in north central Minnesota, is made up of large black spruce raised bogs separated by sedge-covered water tracks marked by string patterns and teardrop-shaped forested islands. About 3 m of peat overlie a prairie soil; the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Botany
Main Author: Griffin, Kerstin O.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1977
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/b77-025
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/b77-025
Description
Summary:The Red Lake Peatland, situated on the eastern arm of the Lake Agassiz plain in north central Minnesota, is made up of large black spruce raised bogs separated by sedge-covered water tracks marked by string patterns and teardrop-shaped forested islands. About 3 m of peat overlie a prairie soil; the basal peat is 3170 ± 100 years old ( 14 C date). Stratigraphic distribution of pollen, macrofossils, and peat components in a series of cores along a small forested island was used to study the development of the peatland.In pollen zone RLB-1 (lowest) the upland pollen types suggest an oak savanna with a developing mesic deciduous forest. The local pollen indicates a succession from a Typha marsh to a sedge meadow. Zone 2 shows a small rise in Pinus pollen; Ericaceae pollen and Sphagnum spores indicate the development of a bog–heath vegetation type at the coring site. An increase in pollen of spruce and larch reflects the establishment of the island forest. Zone 3 is marked by a rise in Ambrosia pollen, recording agricultural land clearance in northwestern Minnesota in about 1890.The Salix–herb macrofossil assemblage occurs at the base of some cores; it is succeeded stratigraphically by the Typha–Scirpus assemblage, which also makes up the base of the remaining cores. There follows the Carex diandra – Carex aquatilis assemblage, suggesting a sedge meadow. The overlying Menyanthes–Larix assemblage continues to the surface under the sedge fen; under the island, seeds of Chamaedaphne and needles of Picea occur in this assemblage. The incoming of the Menyanthes–Larix assemblage is believed to reflect the first development of the patterned wetland.Reed peat comprises the bottom 20–50 cm of all cores; it corresponds with the lower part of pollen zone 1 and contains the Typha–Scirpus macrofossil assemblage. Pure sedge peat or sedge peat with Bryales corresponds with zone 2 and upper zone 1 of the pollen diagram and contains the Carex diandra –C. aquatilis macrofossil assemblage. Ericaceous peat occurs only under the island, ...