Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains

© 2019 Solomonova, Blinnikov, Silantyeva and Speranskaja. Background and Aims: Reconstruction of past ecosystems requires a robust understanding of modern deposition patterns and taphonomy for the proxies utilized. Recent advances in phytolith analysis have contributed to improved understanding of t...

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Main Authors: Solomonova M., Blinnikov M., Silantyeva M., Speranskaja N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openrepository.ru/article?id=198158
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spelling ftneicon:oai:rour.neicon.ru:rour/198158 2023-05-15T18:40:47+02:00 Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains Solomonova M. Blinnikov M. Silantyeva M. Speranskaja N. 2019 https://openrepository.ru/article?id=198158 unknown JAN 7 http://rour.neicon.ru:80/xmlui/bitstream/rour/198158/1/nora.pdf https://openrepository.ru/article?id=198158 SCOPUS-2019-7--SID85068436654 Elevational gradient Modern soils Phytoliths Plant communities The Altay Article 2019 ftneicon 2020-07-21T12:05:51Z © 2019 Solomonova, Blinnikov, Silantyeva and Speranskaja. Background and Aims: Reconstruction of past ecosystems requires a robust understanding of modern deposition patterns and taphonomy for the proxies utilized. Recent advances in phytolith analysis have contributed to improved understanding of these processes, but many gaps remain. This study aims to test a few specific hypotheses that have been proposed by research outside the tropics in the Northern Hemisphere. Our study area focuses on the Northern Altay, a culturally important region, entirely within Russia, north of China, and Mongolia. We collected 60 phytolith assemblages from modern soils at 300 to 2,300 m a.s.l. elevations, sampled from 20 plots in triple replicates within 13 different plant communities. Detailed releves of these plant communities, including forests, meadows, steppe, and alpine tundra, were obtained during the summer of 2017. We used a locally derived scheme of V. P. Sedelnikov to assign studied communities to ecological categories based on moisture and temperature availability. Methods: Standard oxidation and heavy liquid flotation methods of extraction were used. Morphotypes were counted under 400-1,000x magnification on an optical microscope. We used a two-tier approach to phytolith morphotypes classification: a detailed one with over 40 morphotypes included and a shorter one with only sums of selected morphotypes. The former approach can produce some interesting results, such as using various types of rondels (e.g., pyramidal vs. keeled) or large vs. small lanceolate (trichomes). Using sums may be more widely applicable, because the researchers can replicate these results better and less training is needed. However, there are fewer diagnostic options with the sums approach. Key Results: Our results, using discriminant analysis, canonical correspondence analysis and other multivariate statistical methods, confirm earlier studies, both in the region and elsewhere that despite redundancy in phytolith distributions in soils, there are some selected morphotypes that can reliably distinguish communities at various positions along elevational, moisture, and temperature gradients. We developed a regionally diagnostic key that allows researchers to quickly identify various plant communities based on their phytolith assemblages in soils. Conclusions: Seven of 13 regionally important communities at medium elevations in the Altay Mountains can be distinguished by using aggregated and more detailed phytolith morphotypes. Article in Journal/Newspaper Tundra NORA (National aggregator of open repositories of Russian universities)
institution Open Polar
collection NORA (National aggregator of open repositories of Russian universities)
op_collection_id ftneicon
language unknown
topic Elevational gradient
Modern soils
Phytoliths
Plant communities
The Altay
spellingShingle Elevational gradient
Modern soils
Phytoliths
Plant communities
The Altay
Solomonova M.
Blinnikov M.
Silantyeva M.
Speranskaja N.
Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains
topic_facet Elevational gradient
Modern soils
Phytoliths
Plant communities
The Altay
description © 2019 Solomonova, Blinnikov, Silantyeva and Speranskaja. Background and Aims: Reconstruction of past ecosystems requires a robust understanding of modern deposition patterns and taphonomy for the proxies utilized. Recent advances in phytolith analysis have contributed to improved understanding of these processes, but many gaps remain. This study aims to test a few specific hypotheses that have been proposed by research outside the tropics in the Northern Hemisphere. Our study area focuses on the Northern Altay, a culturally important region, entirely within Russia, north of China, and Mongolia. We collected 60 phytolith assemblages from modern soils at 300 to 2,300 m a.s.l. elevations, sampled from 20 plots in triple replicates within 13 different plant communities. Detailed releves of these plant communities, including forests, meadows, steppe, and alpine tundra, were obtained during the summer of 2017. We used a locally derived scheme of V. P. Sedelnikov to assign studied communities to ecological categories based on moisture and temperature availability. Methods: Standard oxidation and heavy liquid flotation methods of extraction were used. Morphotypes were counted under 400-1,000x magnification on an optical microscope. We used a two-tier approach to phytolith morphotypes classification: a detailed one with over 40 morphotypes included and a shorter one with only sums of selected morphotypes. The former approach can produce some interesting results, such as using various types of rondels (e.g., pyramidal vs. keeled) or large vs. small lanceolate (trichomes). Using sums may be more widely applicable, because the researchers can replicate these results better and less training is needed. However, there are fewer diagnostic options with the sums approach. Key Results: Our results, using discriminant analysis, canonical correspondence analysis and other multivariate statistical methods, confirm earlier studies, both in the region and elsewhere that despite redundancy in phytolith distributions in soils, there are some selected morphotypes that can reliably distinguish communities at various positions along elevational, moisture, and temperature gradients. We developed a regionally diagnostic key that allows researchers to quickly identify various plant communities based on their phytolith assemblages in soils. Conclusions: Seven of 13 regionally important communities at medium elevations in the Altay Mountains can be distinguished by using aggregated and more detailed phytolith morphotypes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Solomonova M.
Blinnikov M.
Silantyeva M.
Speranskaja N.
author_facet Solomonova M.
Blinnikov M.
Silantyeva M.
Speranskaja N.
author_sort Solomonova M.
title Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains
title_short Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains
title_full Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains
title_fullStr Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains
title_full_unstemmed Influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: A case study from the Altay mountains
title_sort influence of moisture and temperature regimes on the phytolith assemblage composition of mountain ecosystems of the mid latitudes: a case study from the altay mountains
publishDate 2019
url https://openrepository.ru/article?id=198158
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_source SCOPUS-2019-7--SID85068436654
op_relation JAN
7
http://rour.neicon.ru:80/xmlui/bitstream/rour/198158/1/nora.pdf
https://openrepository.ru/article?id=198158
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