2008
DOI: 10.1007/s00334-008-0148-8
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Pollen productivity estimates of key European plant taxa for quantitative reconstruction of past vegetation: a review

Abstract: Information on the spatial distribution of past vegetation on local, regional and global scales is increasingly used within climate modelling, nature conservancy and archaeology. It is possible to obtain such information from fossil pollen records in lakes and bogs using the landscape reconstruction algorithm (LRA) and its two models, REVEALS and LOVE. These models assume that reliable pollen productivity estimates (PPEs) are available for the plant taxa involved in the quantitative reconstructions of past veg… Show more

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Cited by 284 publications
(262 citation statements)
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“…Calcote, 1995;, and of 400 m þ for mosaic landscapes (e.g. Broström et al, 2005), offer some support for the choice of nesting distances (see Broström et al, 2008), which for moss polster pollen assemblage studies typically move from detailed recording to community mapping at about 10 m and from field mapping to Fig. 3.…”
Section: Distance-dependent Contribution To Pollen Loadingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Calcote, 1995;, and of 400 m þ for mosaic landscapes (e.g. Broström et al, 2005), offer some support for the choice of nesting distances (see Broström et al, 2008), which for moss polster pollen assemblage studies typically move from detailed recording to community mapping at about 10 m and from field mapping to Fig. 3.…”
Section: Distance-dependent Contribution To Pollen Loadingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most recent studies use vegetation survey data from multiple distances (e.g. Broström et al, 2008) where ERV analysis is applied using cumulated distance-weighted plant abundance at increasing distances from the pollen sample points. Estimates of the model parameters, RPP and the background pollen term, are taken from the values at, or an average of values at distances greater than, the Relevant Source Area of Pollen (RSAP).…”
Section: Model Calibrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition to using pollen records to investigate vegetation dynamics at individual sites through time, palaeoecologists have used the large amount of information stored in the database to address a range of scientific questions at regional or continental scales, such as (1) the reconstruction of patterns of past climate change through time and space (Davis et al 2003), which in turn is important in studies of general circulation models in the past (Bonfils et al 2004); (2) studies of the spread of plants, especially trees, since the last glaciation (Brewer et al 2002;Terhürne-Berson et al 2004;Giesecke and Bennett 2004;Conedera et al 2004;Krebs et al 2004; Van der Knaap et al 2005;Magri 2008); (3) reconstructions of past plant distribution patterns which allow testing of our understanding of factors limiting these and models that attempt to capture them (Giesecke et al 2007;Liepelt et al 2008) and increased precision in past land-cover reconstructions Broström et al 2008;Caseldine et al 2008). In addition, knowledge of pollen-inferred past landcover changes allows evaluation of the consequences and legacies of past land-use and provides information on the dynamic responses of vegetation to a constantly changing environment.…”
Section: Role Of the Epdmentioning
confidence: 99%