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Anneli Poska

Postdoctoral fellow

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Creating spatially continuous maps of past land cover from point estimates: A new statistical approach applied to pollen data

Author

  • Behnaz Pirzamanbein
  • Johan Lindström
  • Anneli Poska
  • Shinya Sugita
  • Anna-Kari Trondman
  • Ralph Fyfe
  • Florence Mazier
  • Anne Birgitte Nielsen
  • Jed O. Kaplan
  • Anne E. Bjune
  • H. John B. Birks
  • Thomas Giesecke
  • Mikhel Kangur
  • Małgorzata Latałowa
  • Laurent Marquer
  • Benjamin Smith
  • Marie-José Gaillard

Summary, in English

Reliable estimates of past land cover are critical for assessing potential effects of anthropogenic land-cover changes on past earth surface-climate feedbacks and landscape complexity. Fossil pollen records from lakes and bogs have provided important information on past natural and human-induced vegetation cover. However, those records provide only point estimates of past land cover, and not the spatially continuous maps at regional and sub-continental scales needed for climate modelling.



We propose a set of statistical models that create spatially continuous maps of past land cover by combining two data sets: 1) pollen-based point estimates of past land cover (from the REVEALS model) and 2) spatially continuous estimates of past land cover, obtained by combining simulated potential vegetation (from LPJ-GUESS) with an anthropogenic land-cover change scenario (KK10). The proposed models rely on statistical methodology for compositional data and use Gaussian Markov Random Fields to model spatial dependencies in the data.



Land-cover reconstructions are presented for three time windows in Europe: 0.05, 0.2, and 6 ka years before present (BP). The models are evaluated through cross-validation, deviance information criteria and by comparing the reconstruction of the 0.05 ka time window to the present-day land-cover data compiled by the European Forest Institute (EFI). For 0.05 ka, the proposed models provide reconstructions that are closer to the EFI data than either the REVEALS- or LPJ-GUESS/KK10-based estimates; thus the statistical combination of the two estimates improves the reconstruction. The reconstruction by the proposed models for 0.2 ka is also good. For 6 ka, however, the large differences between the REVEALS- and LPJ-GUESS/KK10-based estimates reduce the reliability of the proposed models. Possible reasons for the increased differences between REVEALS and LPJ-GUESS/KK10 for older time periods and further improvement of the proposed models are discussed.

Department/s

  • Mathematical Statistics
  • Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
  • MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Pages

127-141

Publication/Series

Ecological Complexity: An International Journal on Biocomplexity in the Environment and Theoretical Ecology

Volume

20

Issue

December 2014

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
  • Probability Theory and Statistics

Keywords

  • Land cover
  • Spatial modeling
  • Paleoecology
  • Pollen
  • Compositional data
  • Gaussian Markov random fields

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1476-945X