Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?

Aim The boreal tree line is a prominent biogeographic feature, the position of which reflects climatic conditions. Pollen is the key sensor used to reconstruct past tree line patterns. Our aims in this study were to investigate pollen– vegetation relationships at the boreal tree line and to assess t...

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Main Authors: Binney, Heather A., Gething, Peter W., Nield, Joanna M., Sugita, S, Edwards, Mary E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/197231/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:197231 2023-07-30T04:07:21+02:00 Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit? Binney, Heather A. Gething, Peter W. Nield, Joanna M. Sugita, S Edwards, Mary E. 2011-09 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/197231/ unknown Binney, Heather A., Gething, Peter W., Nield, Joanna M., Sugita, S and Edwards, Mary E. (2011) Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit? Journal of Biogeography, 38 (9), 1792-1806. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2699.2011.02507.x <http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2011.02507.x>). Article PeerReviewed 2011 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T21:23:38Z Aim The boreal tree line is a prominent biogeographic feature, the position of which reflects climatic conditions. Pollen is the key sensor used to reconstruct past tree line patterns. Our aims in this study were to investigate pollen– vegetation relationships at the boreal tree line and to assess the success of a modified version of the biomization method that incorporates pollen productivity and dispersal in distinguishing the tree line. Location Northern Canada (307 sites) and Alaska (316 sites). Methods The REVEALS method for estimating regional vegetation composition from pollen data was simplified to provide correction factors to account for differential production and dispersal of pollen among taxa. The REVEALS-based correction factors were used to adapt the biomization method and applied as a set of experiments to pollen data from lake sediments and moss polsters from the boreal tree line. Proportions of forest and tundra predicted from modern pollen samples along two longitudinal transects were compared with those derived from a vegetation map by: (1) a tally of ‘correct’ versus ‘incorrect’ assignments using vegetation in the relevant map pixels, and (2) a comparison of the shape and position of north–south forest-cover curves generated from all transect pixels and from pollen data. Possible causes of bias in the misclassifications were assessed. Results Correcting for pollen productivity alone gave fewest misclassifications and the closest estimate of the modern mapped tree line position (Canada, + 300 km; Alaska, + 10 km). In Canada success rates were c. 40–70% and all experiments over-predicted forest cover. Most corrections improved results over uncorrected biomization; using only lakes improved success rates to c. 80%. In Alaska success rates were 70–80% and classification errors were more evenly distributed; there was little improvement over uncorrected biomization. Main conclusions Corrected biomization should improve broad-scale reconstructions of spatial patterns in forest/non-forest vegetation ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Tundra Alaska University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description Aim The boreal tree line is a prominent biogeographic feature, the position of which reflects climatic conditions. Pollen is the key sensor used to reconstruct past tree line patterns. Our aims in this study were to investigate pollen– vegetation relationships at the boreal tree line and to assess the success of a modified version of the biomization method that incorporates pollen productivity and dispersal in distinguishing the tree line. Location Northern Canada (307 sites) and Alaska (316 sites). Methods The REVEALS method for estimating regional vegetation composition from pollen data was simplified to provide correction factors to account for differential production and dispersal of pollen among taxa. The REVEALS-based correction factors were used to adapt the biomization method and applied as a set of experiments to pollen data from lake sediments and moss polsters from the boreal tree line. Proportions of forest and tundra predicted from modern pollen samples along two longitudinal transects were compared with those derived from a vegetation map by: (1) a tally of ‘correct’ versus ‘incorrect’ assignments using vegetation in the relevant map pixels, and (2) a comparison of the shape and position of north–south forest-cover curves generated from all transect pixels and from pollen data. Possible causes of bias in the misclassifications were assessed. Results Correcting for pollen productivity alone gave fewest misclassifications and the closest estimate of the modern mapped tree line position (Canada, + 300 km; Alaska, + 10 km). In Canada success rates were c. 40–70% and all experiments over-predicted forest cover. Most corrections improved results over uncorrected biomization; using only lakes improved success rates to c. 80%. In Alaska success rates were 70–80% and classification errors were more evenly distributed; there was little improvement over uncorrected biomization. Main conclusions Corrected biomization should improve broad-scale reconstructions of spatial patterns in forest/non-forest vegetation ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Binney, Heather A.
Gething, Peter W.
Nield, Joanna M.
Sugita, S
Edwards, Mary E.
spellingShingle Binney, Heather A.
Gething, Peter W.
Nield, Joanna M.
Sugita, S
Edwards, Mary E.
Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
author_facet Binney, Heather A.
Gething, Peter W.
Nield, Joanna M.
Sugita, S
Edwards, Mary E.
author_sort Binney, Heather A.
title Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
title_short Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
title_full Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
title_fullStr Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
title_full_unstemmed Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
title_sort treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit?
publishDate 2011
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/197231/
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Tundra
Alaska
op_relation Binney, Heather A., Gething, Peter W., Nield, Joanna M., Sugita, S and Edwards, Mary E. (2011) Treeline identification from pollen data: beyond the limit? Journal of Biogeography, 38 (9), 1792-1806. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2699.2011.02507.x <http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2011.02507.x>).
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