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A palaeoecological study of holocene peat bog sections in Germany and The Netherlands, based on the analysis of pollen, spores and macro- and microscopic remains of fungi, algae, cormophytes and animals

Identifieur interne : 001B23 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 001B22; suivant : 001B24

A palaeoecological study of holocene peat bog sections in Germany and The Netherlands, based on the analysis of pollen, spores and macro- and microscopic remains of fungi, algae, cormophytes and animals

Auteurs : B. Van Geel [Pays-Bas]

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:FA1C8B0F2A79F9A745C1904943789CF625CCEDBD

Abstract

A Holocene peat section of the Engbertsdijksveen (The Netherlands) was analysed at centrimetre intervals for all kinds of micro- and macrofossils in order to obtain maximum information regarding local vegetation and animal succession and regional changes in the prevailing vegetation types. The analysed micro- and macrofossils are illustrated, described and interpreted. Among them are about 70 fungal taxa, about 25 animal taxa, at least 4 algae, and about 15 fossils of unknown identity or origin. The taxonomic designation, matrix, host- or substrate specificity and indicator value of representatives of five different groups of fossils have been tabulated. The fruit-bodies of several taxa distinguished as spore types were found during the macrofossil analysis, e.g., ascospores, mycelium and fruit-bodies of the parasite Meliola cf. niessleana (Type 14) are present in the levels in which Calluna vulgaris played a role in the local vegetation. The ascomycete Geoglossum sphagnophilum was, according to its spore distribution, a common element in the bog vegetation during the Atlantic and Subboreal periods. Zygospores of Mougeotia cf. gracillima (Type 61) and other Zygnemataceae indicate the levels where these algae could grow during the local succession in the peat bog. The zygospores indicate phases of shallow, stagnant, mesotrophic open water during spring. Conventional analysis of pollen and macro-remains with a high resolution in time (centimetre diagrams), the above-mentioned new information, and the correlation of events inside and outside the site of the peat bog lead to the following main conclusions: The Atlantic-Subboreal transition, well known for its elm decline, could be correlated with a local change in bog vegetation. Following the alteration of wet Scheuchzeria palustris vegetation with hummock vegetation in the Atlantic period, the appearance of a Molinia coerulea peat coincides with the elm decline. According to the present ecology of M. coerulea, this change must have been caused by a seasonally recurring, considerable lowering of the groundwater level during summer. During winter the groundwater rose so far that in spring shallow open water prevailed and Mougeotia cf. gracillima could develop. This local vegetational succession indicates an unstable climatic period with pronounced dry seasons during the early Subboreal. During the climatic deterioration of the Subboreal-Subatlantic transition the incidence of Corylus avellana decreased. The Corylus pollen curve shows several cyclic fluctuations during this period (1400-600 B.C.). Depressions in the Corylus pollen curve correspond with particularly wet local vegetation (more oceanic, possibly cooler phases), Corylus pollen maxima correspond with relatively dry bog vegetation (less oceanic, possibly warmer phases). These cyclic fluctuations correspond to approximately 150–200 historical years each. The increasing oceanicity ultimately resulted in the formation of peat by Sphagnum species of the section Cymbifolia. In this Subatlantic Cymbifolia peat the fluctuations of the minor constituent Sphagnum cf. rubellum are clearly correlated with the fluctuations of the curve of the rhizopod Amphitrema flavum. This phenomenon is interpreted as a reflection of more and less oceanic phases during the Subatlantic period. All available data were expressed in curves, in order to indicate changes in local and perhaps regional moisture conditions. Ther percentages of plants indicating human influence are relatively low during the Neolithic and Bronze Age. During the Iron Age the influence of prehistoric man was relatively important. Secale cereale was already grown during the secondary century B.C. Population density decreased again during the second century A.D. The present study is intended as a first step towards a more detailed knowledge of the changing ecosystems of bogs and forests and in their response to changing environmental factors, such as minor and major climatic cycles.

Url:
DOI: 10.1016/0034-6667(78)90040-4


Affiliations:


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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">A Holocene peat section of the Engbertsdijksveen (The Netherlands) was analysed at centrimetre intervals for all kinds of micro- and macrofossils in order to obtain maximum information regarding local vegetation and animal succession and regional changes in the prevailing vegetation types. The analysed micro- and macrofossils are illustrated, described and interpreted. Among them are about 70 fungal taxa, about 25 animal taxa, at least 4 algae, and about 15 fossils of unknown identity or origin. The taxonomic designation, matrix, host- or substrate specificity and indicator value of representatives of five different groups of fossils have been tabulated. The fruit-bodies of several taxa distinguished as spore types were found during the macrofossil analysis, e.g., ascospores, mycelium and fruit-bodies of the parasite Meliola cf. niessleana (Type 14) are present in the levels in which Calluna vulgaris played a role in the local vegetation. The ascomycete Geoglossum sphagnophilum was, according to its spore distribution, a common element in the bog vegetation during the Atlantic and Subboreal periods. Zygospores of Mougeotia cf. gracillima (Type 61) and other Zygnemataceae indicate the levels where these algae could grow during the local succession in the peat bog. The zygospores indicate phases of shallow, stagnant, mesotrophic open water during spring. Conventional analysis of pollen and macro-remains with a high resolution in time (centimetre diagrams), the above-mentioned new information, and the correlation of events inside and outside the site of the peat bog lead to the following main conclusions: The Atlantic-Subboreal transition, well known for its elm decline, could be correlated with a local change in bog vegetation. Following the alteration of wet Scheuchzeria palustris vegetation with hummock vegetation in the Atlantic period, the appearance of a Molinia coerulea peat coincides with the elm decline. According to the present ecology of M. coerulea, this change must have been caused by a seasonally recurring, considerable lowering of the groundwater level during summer. During winter the groundwater rose so far that in spring shallow open water prevailed and Mougeotia cf. gracillima could develop. This local vegetational succession indicates an unstable climatic period with pronounced dry seasons during the early Subboreal. During the climatic deterioration of the Subboreal-Subatlantic transition the incidence of Corylus avellana decreased. The Corylus pollen curve shows several cyclic fluctuations during this period (1400-600 B.C.). Depressions in the Corylus pollen curve correspond with particularly wet local vegetation (more oceanic, possibly cooler phases), Corylus pollen maxima correspond with relatively dry bog vegetation (less oceanic, possibly warmer phases). These cyclic fluctuations correspond to approximately 150–200 historical years each. The increasing oceanicity ultimately resulted in the formation of peat by Sphagnum species of the section Cymbifolia. In this Subatlantic Cymbifolia peat the fluctuations of the minor constituent Sphagnum cf. rubellum are clearly correlated with the fluctuations of the curve of the rhizopod Amphitrema flavum. This phenomenon is interpreted as a reflection of more and less oceanic phases during the Subatlantic period. All available data were expressed in curves, in order to indicate changes in local and perhaps regional moisture conditions. Ther percentages of plants indicating human influence are relatively low during the Neolithic and Bronze Age. During the Iron Age the influence of prehistoric man was relatively important. Secale cereale was already grown during the secondary century B.C. Population density decreased again during the second century A.D. The present study is intended as a first step towards a more detailed knowledge of the changing ecosystems of bogs and forests and in their response to changing environmental factors, such as minor and major climatic cycles.</div>
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