Pollen-vegetation richness and diversity relationships in the tropics

被引:0
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作者
William D. Gosling
Adele C. M. Julier
Stephen Adu-Bredu
Gloria D. Djagbletey
Wesley T. Fraser
Phillip E. Jardine
Barry H. Lomax
Yadvinder Malhi
Emmanuel A. Manu
Francis E. Mayle
Sam Moore
机构
[1] University of Amsterdam,Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics
[2] Oxford Brookes University,Geography, Department of Social Sciences
[3] CSIR-Forestry Research Institute of Ghana,School of Environment, Earth and Ecosystem Sciences
[4] The Open University,Institute of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[5] Universität Potsdam,Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
[6] The University of Nottingham,Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment
[7] University of Oxford,Department of Geography and Environmental Science
[8] University of Reading,undefined
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关键词
Neotropics; Palaeotropics; Palynology; Pollen trap; Forest-savannah; Savanna;
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摘要
Tracking changes in biodiversity through time requires an understanding of the relationship between modern diversity and how this diversity is preserved in the fossil record. Fossil pollen is one way in which past vegetation diversity can be reconstructed. However, there is limited understanding of modern pollen-vegetation diversity relationships from biodiverse tropical ecosystems. Here, pollen (palynological) richness and diversity (Hill N1) are compared with vegetation richness and diversity from forest and savannah ecosystems in the New World and Old World tropics (Neotropics and Palaeotropics). Modern pollen data were obtained from artificial pollen traps deployed in 1-ha vegetation study plots from which vegetation inventories had been completed in Bolivia and Ghana. Pollen counts were obtained from 15 to 22 traps per plot, and aggregated pollen sums for each plot were > 2,500. The palynological richness/diversity values from the Neotropics were moist evergreen forest = 86/6.8, semi-deciduous dry forest = 111/21.9, wooded savannah = 138/31.5, and from the Palaeotropics wet evergreen forest = 144/28.3, semi-deciduous moist forest = 104/4.4, forest-savannah transition = 121/14.1; the corresponding vegetation richness/diversity was 100/36.7, 80/38.7 and 71/39.4 (Neotropics), and 101/54.8, 87/45.5 and 71/34.5 (Palaeotropics). No consistent relationship was found between palynological richness/diversity, and plot vegetation richness/diversity, due to the differential influence of other factors such as landscape diversity, pollination strategy, and pollen source area. Palynological richness exceeded vegetation richness, while pollen diversity was lower than vegetation diversity. The relatively high global diversity of tropical vegetation was found to be reflected in the pollen rain.
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页码:411 / 418
页数:7
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