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Vegetation Change

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Title: Vegetation Change


1
  • Vegetation Change
  • Environmental and Anthropogenic Controls on
    Vegetation
  • Documenting Past Vegetation Changes
  • A) Pollen
  • B) Plant Macrofossils
  • III) Paleovegetation Changes in Eastern North
    America

2
I) Environmental Controls
Terrestrial Ecosystems
Aquatic Life Zones
Sunlight Temperature Precipitation Wind
Latitude Altitude Fire frequency Soil
Light penetration Water currents Dissolved
nutrient concentrations (especially N and P)
Suspended solids
3
Biotic - Range of Tolerance
(c)
(c)
(a)
(a)
(b)
4
Forest Composition 1800 as Interpreted from GLO
Survey Notes by MNIF
5
Community
6
Plant succession
climax
Southeastern USA
7
I) Environmental Controls B) Disturbance
8
Photos from Michigan EPIC
9
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10
Cahokia
11
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12
Cahokia
13
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14
  • Vegetation Change
  • Environmental and Anthropogenic Controls on
    Vegetation
  • Documenting Past Vegetation Changes
  • A) Pollen
  • B) Plant Macrofossils
  • III) Paleovegetation Changes in Eastern North
    America

15
  • II) Past Vegetation Changes
  • Pollen (Spores) Palynology
  • 1. What are pollen spores?

16
II) A) Pollen (Spores) 1. What are pollen
spores?
male cone (pollen)
Gymnosperms
female cone (seeds)
17
Gymnosperms naked seeds
18
Angiosperms
19
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20
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21
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22
II) A) Pollen (Spores) 2. Pollen
Production, Dispersal Preservation
23
  • A)
  • 2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation

a) Size
Artemisia (sage( 40 µm)
Poaceae (grass) 60-100 µm
24
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
a) Morphology gt Identification
  • Variations in
  • pores
  • furrows
  • sculpture

25
Epilobium (fireweed)
26
Sculpturing elements
tectum
columella
footwall
27
  • Light Microscope

10X
Objectives 20, 40, 100X
28
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29
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
b) Pollen Production Dispersal
Anemophilous pollen
30
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
b) Pollen Production Dispersal
(i) anemophilous wind-dispersed all conifers
Pinus (pine) Picea (spruce) Larix (tamarack)
Tsuga (hemlock) Carya (hickory) Betula
(birch) Quercus (oak) Populus (poplar)
variability in production Alnus (alder)
highest Pinus (pine) 2nd highest Fagus (beech)
least
31
  • (i) wind-dispersed anemophilous
  • Herbs
  • Poaceae (grass)
  • Artemisia (sage, wormwood)
  • Ambrosia-type (ragweed)

32
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
b) Pollen Production Dispersal
(ii) insect-dispersed entomophilous
Malva (mallow)
Trees Acer (maple) Tilia (basswood)
33
Lilium (lily)
Epilobium (fireweed)
34
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
b) Pollen Production Dispersal
  • (iii) AP/NAP
  • Trees AP arboreal pollen
  • Herbs NAP non-arboreal pollen

35
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
c) Pollen Rain
  • dispersed by air currents
  • within canopy local (lt 20 m)
  • extralocal, regional
  • transported by water
  • select lakes without inlets

Taphonomy
36
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37
Big Stone Lake, MN
38
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39
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40
bioturbation
Moore et al. (1989)
41
2. Pollen Production, Dispersal Preservation
d) Pollen Preservation
  • sporopollenin

Populus (poplar)
Picea (spruce)
42
2. e) Pollen Interpretation
0
Analyst Eric C. Grimm
43
Coldwater Lake, ND Mid-Holocene Aridity
44
  • Vegetation Change
  • Environmental and Anthropogenic Controls on
    Vegetation
  • Documenting Past Vegetation Changes
  • A) Pollen
  • B) Plant Macrofossils
  • III) Paleovegetation Changes in eastern North
    America

45
Proxies of Paleovegetation
POLLEN
PLANT MACROFOSSILS
Picea glauca (white spruce) seed
Picea (spruce) pollen
1 cm
20 ?m
macroscopic low abundance local
vegetation identify to species level
46
B) Plant Macrofossils 1. Size
500 µm
Najas flexilis Chenopodium
berlandieri
47
B) Plant Macrofossils
  • 2. Species Identification

Hippuris vulgaris (mares- Tail)
48
B) Plant Macrofossils 3. Production, Dispersal
Preservation
49
  • Vegetation Change
  • Environmental and Anthropogenic Controls on
    Vegetation
  • Documenting Past Vegetation Changes
  • A) Pollen
  • B) Plant Macrofossils
  • III) Paleovegetation Changes in Eastern North
    America

50
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51
Miner Lake, Allegan Co., Michigan Core
Stratigraphy
52
Individualistic Plant Migration
Picea migration northwards (green is 20 or
higher amounts of spruce pollen)
  • 18 15 12 9
    6 3 0
  • ka (1000 yr
    B.P.)

http//www.geo.brown.edu/georesearch/esh/QE/QEHome
.html
53
Non-Analog Vegetation
14 ka 13 ka 12 ka 11 ka
10 ka
Calendar years Shuman et al. (2002)
54
0
Analyst Eric C. Grimm
55
Refugia
56
28,000 25,000 14C yr BP
57
Reconstruction by R. Webb J. Overpeck for the
eastern USA.
58
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59
0
Fox River Stone Company Quarry, IL
60
Dryas integrifolia (arctic dryad)
1 mm
61
Floods -gt leaves other plant remains deposited
in proglacial lakes
Aktineq Glacier Bylot Island Nuvanut, Canada
Photo B. Shilts
62
Illinois at 16,000 yr B.P.
http//www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/larson/envi
ronments.html
63
Late-Glacial Spruce Parkland
Yansa (2006)
64
13,000 14C yr BP
65
Changes in climate boundary conditions since the
Last Glacial Maximum
66
Adapted from Overstreet (2002)
67
Schaeffer Mammoth Site (1992-93)
Drainage tile (1964)
75 of skeleton intact adult male 36 years old
68
Paleobotany of the Schaefer Site Core (2004)
Sources Stuiver et al. (1995) Cross (2002)
69
Forming the Great Lakes
70
Reconstruction by R. Webb J. Overpeck for the
eastern USA, using pollen data.
71
21,000 cal 18,000 14C yr B.P. J.W. Williams.
2004. Variations in tree cover in North America
since the last glacial maximum, Global and
Planetary Change
72
12,000 cal yr 10,500 14C yr B.P. Shuman et
al. (2002)
73
11,000 14C yr B.P.
74
0
Analyst Eric C. Grimm
75
Late Arrivals Fagus Tsuga at 7000 14C yr BP
MODIS 9/17/2003
76
Fagus grandifolia (Beech)
77
Tsuga canadensis (Eastern Hemlock)
78
8000 14C yr B.P. maximum aridity on the Great
Plains Southern boreal forest ecotone shifted
80 km northwards
79
6 ka climate Expression of maximum warmth in the
Midwest
Prairie peninsula (Transeau, 1935)
80
Climate Model ComparisonsThese maps represent
the differences between Growing Degree Days (GDD)
for 6,000 years ago and today. The upper nine
maps were produced by climate simulations from
different models, while the map on the lower
right represents the same GDD difference inferred
from pollen.
http//www.geo.brown.edu/georesearch/esh/QE/QEHome
.html
81
Reconstruction by R. Webb J. Overpeck for the
eastern USA.
82
Medieval Warm Period AD 800-1200
83
Cahokia
84
Little Ice Age
Forest Composition 1800 as Interpreted from GLO
Survey Notes by MNIF
85
Figure 13-8Page 286
Projected increase 1.5 6ºC Most think 2 4ºC
86
Present range
Future range
Overlap
87
  • Pollen Personalities
  • 1. Tom Webb, Dept. of Geological Sciences, Brown
    Univ.

Paige Newby
88
  • A)Pollen Personalities
  • 2. Margaret Davis, Dept. of Ecology, Univ. of
    Minnesota

Ph.D., Harvard University, 1957
89
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 3. Jonathan Overpeck
  • Was at NOAA/NGDC Paleoclimatology Program, and
    INSTAAR, University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Now Professor of Geosciences, U of Arizona

90
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • Jim Ritchie
  • Father of Canadian pollen analysis
  • Was at U of Toronto (advisor of Glen MacDonald,
    UCLA)
  • Retired to Ireland

91
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 5. Glen MacDonald
  • Dept of Geography, UCLA
  • Was at McMaster Univ. in Ontario

92
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 6. The Delcourts
  • Hazel R. Delcourt Paul A. Delcourt
  • Dept. of Ecology Evol Biology,U of Tennessee

93
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 7. Patrick Bartlein, Dept. of Geography, U of
    Oregon (Eugene)
  • climatologist data modeler

94
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 8. Jock McAndrews, Dept. of Botany, U of Toronto
  • Great Lakes climate reconstruction aboriginal
    impacts

95
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 8. Jock McAndrews, Dept. of Botany, U of Toronto
  • Great Lakes climate reconstruction aboriginal
    impacts

Crawford Lake, Ontario Iroquoian villages corn
fields
96
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 9. Herb Wright Jr., Prof. Emeritis, Dept. of
    Geology Geophysics, U of Minnesota
  • Ph.D . 1943 Harvard
  • University, Geology
  • Synthesis papers
  • 1960s-1990s
  • Founder of the LRC
  • Livingston corer
  • Geologic history

97
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 10. Ronald Kapp, Alma College, MI
  • Ronald O. Kapp Memorial Prairie on the west side
    of the Coolbough Natural Areas

98
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 11. Eric Grimm, Illinois State Museum
  • Research in Great Plains, Illinois, Florida
  • Creator of Tilia Tilia.graph pollen data
    plotting software

Eric
99
  • A) Pollen Personalities
  • 12. Lou Maher, Dept. of Geological Sci., Univ. of
    Wisconsin-Madison
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