Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

Fungi play key and specific roles in ecosystems, specifically as many have restricted geographic distributions, known host/substrate preferences, and are important local environmental indicators due to their short dispersal distances. This study of fossil fungi from a time interval of pronounced glo...

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Main Author: Pilie, Mallory
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: LSU Scholarly Repository 2023
Subjects:
MCO
Online Access:https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/5750
https://doi.org/10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750
https://repository.lsu.edu/context/gradschool_theses/article/6834/viewcontent/Evaluating_Fungal_Population_Response_to_the_Miocene_Climatic_Opt.pdf
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spelling ftlouisianastuir:oai:repository.lsu.edu:gradschool_theses-6834 2024-09-15T17:43:47+00:00 Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica Pilie, Mallory 2023-04-05T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/5750 https://doi.org/10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750 https://repository.lsu.edu/context/gradschool_theses/article/6834/viewcontent/Evaluating_Fungal_Population_Response_to_the_Miocene_Climatic_Opt.pdf unknown LSU Scholarly Repository https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/5750 doi:10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750 https://repository.lsu.edu/context/gradschool_theses/article/6834/viewcontent/Evaluating_Fungal_Population_Response_to_the_Miocene_Climatic_Opt.pdf LSU Master's Theses MCO MMCO fungi FiaWW palynology paleoclimate Ross Sea Climate Earth Sciences Geochemistry Geology Paleobiology Physical Sciences and Mathematics text 2023 ftlouisianastuir https://doi.org/10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750 2024-08-08T04:27:16Z Fungi play key and specific roles in ecosystems, specifically as many have restricted geographic distributions, known host/substrate preferences, and are important local environmental indicators due to their short dispersal distances. This study of fossil fungi from a time interval of pronounced global warming, the Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO), allows analysis of fungal response to an analogue for future climate change scenarios. The research presented herein is part of a larger project, Fungi in a Warmer World (FiaWW), which is using globally-distributed sediment samples to provide foundational information on fungal community distribution patterns and will provide the first fungi-based climatological reconstructions for this time period. A probability-based climate reconstruction technique (CREST) provides an accurate plant-based representation of paleoclimate for each MCO locality studied and acts as an external control for the fungi-based paleoclimate reconstructions proposed herein. For this thesis, 27 samples from middle Miocene cored intervals in the South China Sea (SCS) and 44 samples from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica (SMS) are studied. Although diagenesis likely caused significant impacts to the SCS MCO samples, the fungal assemblage present immediately following the MCO indicates a Köppen–Geiger climate class characterized by tropical to temperate conditions. According to CREST, the reconstructed MCO climate for the nearest landmass to the SCS study site is warmer and drier during the winter, when compared to modern-day climate, with precipitation during the MCO being only 37% of modern-day levels. Fungi are depauperate members of the SMS MCO palynoflora, with a single morphotype present in low abundance and maximum concentration ranging only from 72 to 199 fungi per gram of dried sediments. Apiosporaceae fungi are cosmopolitan and show taxa present during the MCO in Antarctica adapt to a wide range of climate and environmental conditions. CREST reconstructs a warmer and significantly wetter than ... Text Antarc* Antarctica McMurdo Sound Ross Sea LSU Digital Commons (Louisiana State University)
institution Open Polar
collection LSU Digital Commons (Louisiana State University)
op_collection_id ftlouisianastuir
language unknown
topic MCO
MMCO
fungi
FiaWW
palynology
paleoclimate
Ross Sea
Climate
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
Geology
Paleobiology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
spellingShingle MCO
MMCO
fungi
FiaWW
palynology
paleoclimate
Ross Sea
Climate
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
Geology
Paleobiology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Pilie, Mallory
Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
topic_facet MCO
MMCO
fungi
FiaWW
palynology
paleoclimate
Ross Sea
Climate
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
Geology
Paleobiology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
description Fungi play key and specific roles in ecosystems, specifically as many have restricted geographic distributions, known host/substrate preferences, and are important local environmental indicators due to their short dispersal distances. This study of fossil fungi from a time interval of pronounced global warming, the Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO), allows analysis of fungal response to an analogue for future climate change scenarios. The research presented herein is part of a larger project, Fungi in a Warmer World (FiaWW), which is using globally-distributed sediment samples to provide foundational information on fungal community distribution patterns and will provide the first fungi-based climatological reconstructions for this time period. A probability-based climate reconstruction technique (CREST) provides an accurate plant-based representation of paleoclimate for each MCO locality studied and acts as an external control for the fungi-based paleoclimate reconstructions proposed herein. For this thesis, 27 samples from middle Miocene cored intervals in the South China Sea (SCS) and 44 samples from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica (SMS) are studied. Although diagenesis likely caused significant impacts to the SCS MCO samples, the fungal assemblage present immediately following the MCO indicates a Köppen–Geiger climate class characterized by tropical to temperate conditions. According to CREST, the reconstructed MCO climate for the nearest landmass to the SCS study site is warmer and drier during the winter, when compared to modern-day climate, with precipitation during the MCO being only 37% of modern-day levels. Fungi are depauperate members of the SMS MCO palynoflora, with a single morphotype present in low abundance and maximum concentration ranging only from 72 to 199 fungi per gram of dried sediments. Apiosporaceae fungi are cosmopolitan and show taxa present during the MCO in Antarctica adapt to a wide range of climate and environmental conditions. CREST reconstructs a warmer and significantly wetter than ...
format Text
author Pilie, Mallory
author_facet Pilie, Mallory
author_sort Pilie, Mallory
title Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_short Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_full Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_fullStr Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Fungal Population Response to the Miocene Climatic Optimum: High-Resolution Palynological Insights from the South China Sea and McMurdo Sound, Antarctica
title_sort evaluating fungal population response to the miocene climatic optimum: high-resolution palynological insights from the south china sea and mcmurdo sound, antarctica
publisher LSU Scholarly Repository
publishDate 2023
url https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/5750
https://doi.org/10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750
https://repository.lsu.edu/context/gradschool_theses/article/6834/viewcontent/Evaluating_Fungal_Population_Response_to_the_Miocene_Climatic_Opt.pdf
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
McMurdo Sound
Ross Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
McMurdo Sound
Ross Sea
op_source LSU Master's Theses
op_relation https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/5750
doi:10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750
https://repository.lsu.edu/context/gradschool_theses/article/6834/viewcontent/Evaluating_Fungal_Population_Response_to_the_Miocene_Climatic_Opt.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.31390/gradschool_theses.5750
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