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Anne Birgitte Nielsen

Anne Birgitte Nielsen

Senior lecturer

Anne Birgitte Nielsen

Quantitative vegetation reconstruction from pollen analysis and historical inventory data around a Danish small forest hollow

Author

  • Mette Venas Overballe-Petersen
  • Anne Birgitte Nielsen
  • Richard H. W. Bradshaw

Summary, in English

Questions Can the model performance of the landscape reconstruction algorithm (LRA) for small forest hollows be validated through comparison to inventory-based vegetation reconstructions from the last 150yrs? Does the application of LRA and the comparison to historical data enhance interpretation of the pollen record? Location Denmark. The Gribskov-Ostrup small forest hollow (56 degrees N, 12 degrees 20E, 44m a.s.l.) in the forest of Gribskov, eastern Denmark. Methods Pollen analysis was carried out on a small forest hollow, and LRA used to derive pollen-based quantitative estimates of past vegetation. Historical forest inventory data and maps were used to reconstruct the vegetation within three different circles around the hollow (20, 50 and 200m ring widths) for five time periods during the last 150yrs. The results of the two approaches were compared in order to evaluate model performance, and the LRA-based reconstruction used to describe how the model changes interpretation of vegetation development during the last ca. 6500yrs compared to the use of pollen percentages alone. Results Distance-weighted inventory-based reconstructions within 200m of the hollow's edge provide the best match with the LRA-modelled vegetation. Precise validation of the model is not possible due to insufficient historical data, but the comparison indicates that the LRA reconstruction for Gribskov tends to (1) underestimate tree cover and overestimate open areas, (2) give a too high representation of on-site pollen types, (3) give an underestimation of Fagus and (4) a small overestimation of Quercus and Corylus. Despite these uncertainties, application of the LRA model shows a higher degree of openness than would be apparent from the uncorrected pollen diagram, and makes it possible to attempt to distinguish changes at the local scale from regional vegetation changes, thus giving a clearer picture of the vegetation changes at the site. Conclusions We demonstrate that the estimates of the LRA model applied to pollen data from small forest hollows can be compared with small-scale historical data to evaluate model performance.

Department/s

  • Quaternary Sciences
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate

Publishing year

2013

Language

English

Pages

755-771

Publication/Series

Journal of Vegetation Science

Volume

24

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

International Association of Vegetation Science

Topic

  • Geology

Keywords

  • Denmark
  • Forest history
  • Gribskov
  • Historical maps
  • LOVE
  • LRA
  • Palynology
  • REVEALS

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1654-1103