Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America

PUBLISHED The need to increase the number and distribution of sea-level records spanning the last few hundred years has led to particular interest in developing high-precision, geologically based sea-level reconstructions that capture decimetre and multi-decadal scale changes. Transfer functions for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Micropaleontology
Main Author: EDWARDS, ROBIN JAMES
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/59851
http://people.tcd.ie/edwardsr
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003
id fttrinitycoll:oai:tara.tcd.ie:2262/59851
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive)
op_collection_id fttrinitycoll
language English
topic Geology
Transfer functions
sea level
spellingShingle Geology
Transfer functions
sea level
EDWARDS, ROBIN JAMES
Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America
topic_facet Geology
Transfer functions
sea level
description PUBLISHED The need to increase the number and distribution of sea-level records spanning the last few hundred years has led to particular interest in developing high-precision, geologically based sea-level reconstructions that capture decimetre and multi-decadal scale changes. Transfer functions for tide level are statistical tools that quantify the vertical relationship between inter-tidal microfossils and elevation within the tidal frame and their use in sea-level reconstruction is growing in popularity. Whilst a range of sampling strategies, dataset qualities and underlying statistical models have been used in transfer-function development, all variants share the common requirement of accurately extracting precise species-elevation relationships from surface data, and reliably applying these to fossil assemblages to infer past conditions. We present surface foraminiferal data from six transects sampled at three sites spanning a large latitudinal range extending from Newfoundland (Canada) to North Carolina (USA). These data demonstrate that significant spatial differences exist within the high-marsh foraminiferal assemblages commonly used to reconstruct past relative sea-level (RSL). We standardise these data to account for inter-site differences in tidal range using several variants of the standardised water level index (SWLI) of Horton et al. (1999b) and show that the best performance is achieved by using the highest occurrence of foraminifera as the upper tidal datum level. The standardised surface foraminiferal data are used to develop a suite of foraminiferal transfer functions for tide level which are then applied to fossil assemblages from two sediment cores to reconstruct palaeomarsh-surface elevation. We highlight the manner in which species-elevation relationships are extracted and modified during transfer-function development, and the impacts that choices in dataset composition and transfer-function type have on the resulting reconstructions. Our results graphically illustrate the importance of these choices and the impacts of temporal and spatial variability in foraminiferal distributions, none of which are adequately represented or discernible from the standard summary statistics of performance that commonly accompany transfer-function reconstructions. We conclude that a more explicit treatment of the transfer-function development process is required to support the growing body of precise RSL reconstructions that are now appearing in the literature. To that end, we make the following four recommendations for a framework to assist in transfer-function development that will allow better record inter-comparison and minimise the potential for producing precise but ultimately inaccurate reconstructions: 1) sampling for surface data should focus on capturing complete species response curves rather than simply compiling modern analogues for fossil material; 2) The similarity between the surface assemblages used to produce transfer functions and the fossil assemblages to which they are applied, should be better quantified using range of statistical approaches, and must accompany any reconstruction; 3) where modern analogues are lacking in local surface assemblages, data from additional sites should be added, with selection based on fulfilling the requirements of the previous two recommendations. The manner in which individual species optima are combined to produce a composite optimum, and the extent to which this provides a reasonable representation of the surface data should also be documented; 4) the application of WA PLS component 2 (and higher) cannot be justified solely on the grounds of increased performance measures (e.g. r2jack and RMSEP), and if applied, the pattern of optima updates should be used to highlight species that may distort reconstructions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author EDWARDS, ROBIN JAMES
author_facet EDWARDS, ROBIN JAMES
author_sort EDWARDS, ROBIN JAMES
title Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America
title_short Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America
title_full Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America
title_fullStr Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America
title_full_unstemmed Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America
title_sort reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the atlantic coast of ne north america
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2262/59851
http://people.tcd.ie/edwardsr
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation Marine Micropaleontology;
81;
Wright, A.J., Edwards, R.J., van de Plassche, O., Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America, Marine Micropaleontology, 81, 2011, 43 - 62
Y
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/59851
http://people.tcd.ie/edwardsr
69666
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003
op_rights Y
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003
container_title Marine Micropaleontology
container_volume 81
container_issue 1-2
container_start_page 43
op_container_end_page 62
_version_ 1766110220384206848
spelling fttrinitycoll:oai:tara.tcd.ie:2262/59851 2023-05-15T17:23:07+02:00 Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America EDWARDS, ROBIN JAMES 2011 43 62 http://hdl.handle.net/2262/59851 http://people.tcd.ie/edwardsr https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003 en eng Elsevier Marine Micropaleontology; 81; Wright, A.J., Edwards, R.J., van de Plassche, O., Reassessing transfer-function performance in sea-level reconstruction based on benthic salt-marsh foraminifera from the Atlantic Coast of NE North America, Marine Micropaleontology, 81, 2011, 43 - 62 Y http://hdl.handle.net/2262/59851 http://people.tcd.ie/edwardsr 69666 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003 Y Geology Transfer functions sea level Journal Article scholarly_publications refereed_publications 2011 fttrinitycoll https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.003 2020-02-16T13:52:38Z PUBLISHED The need to increase the number and distribution of sea-level records spanning the last few hundred years has led to particular interest in developing high-precision, geologically based sea-level reconstructions that capture decimetre and multi-decadal scale changes. Transfer functions for tide level are statistical tools that quantify the vertical relationship between inter-tidal microfossils and elevation within the tidal frame and their use in sea-level reconstruction is growing in popularity. Whilst a range of sampling strategies, dataset qualities and underlying statistical models have been used in transfer-function development, all variants share the common requirement of accurately extracting precise species-elevation relationships from surface data, and reliably applying these to fossil assemblages to infer past conditions. We present surface foraminiferal data from six transects sampled at three sites spanning a large latitudinal range extending from Newfoundland (Canada) to North Carolina (USA). These data demonstrate that significant spatial differences exist within the high-marsh foraminiferal assemblages commonly used to reconstruct past relative sea-level (RSL). We standardise these data to account for inter-site differences in tidal range using several variants of the standardised water level index (SWLI) of Horton et al. (1999b) and show that the best performance is achieved by using the highest occurrence of foraminifera as the upper tidal datum level. The standardised surface foraminiferal data are used to develop a suite of foraminiferal transfer functions for tide level which are then applied to fossil assemblages from two sediment cores to reconstruct palaeomarsh-surface elevation. We highlight the manner in which species-elevation relationships are extracted and modified during transfer-function development, and the impacts that choices in dataset composition and transfer-function type have on the resulting reconstructions. Our results graphically illustrate the importance of these choices and the impacts of temporal and spatial variability in foraminiferal distributions, none of which are adequately represented or discernible from the standard summary statistics of performance that commonly accompany transfer-function reconstructions. We conclude that a more explicit treatment of the transfer-function development process is required to support the growing body of precise RSL reconstructions that are now appearing in the literature. To that end, we make the following four recommendations for a framework to assist in transfer-function development that will allow better record inter-comparison and minimise the potential for producing precise but ultimately inaccurate reconstructions: 1) sampling for surface data should focus on capturing complete species response curves rather than simply compiling modern analogues for fossil material; 2) The similarity between the surface assemblages used to produce transfer functions and the fossil assemblages to which they are applied, should be better quantified using range of statistical approaches, and must accompany any reconstruction; 3) where modern analogues are lacking in local surface assemblages, data from additional sites should be added, with selection based on fulfilling the requirements of the previous two recommendations. The manner in which individual species optima are combined to produce a composite optimum, and the extent to which this provides a reasonable representation of the surface data should also be documented; 4) the application of WA PLS component 2 (and higher) cannot be justified solely on the grounds of increased performance measures (e.g. r2jack and RMSEP), and if applied, the pattern of optima updates should be used to highlight species that may distort reconstructions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive) Canada Marine Micropaleontology 81 1-2 43 62