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The REVEALS model, a new tool to estimate past regional plant abundance from pollen data in large lakes: validation in southern Sweden

✍ Scribed by Sofie Hellman; Marie-José Gaillard; Anna Broström; Shinya Sugita


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
719 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0267-8179

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The REVEALS model was developed to reconstruct quantitatively regional vegetation abundance (in a 10^4^–10^5^ km^2^ area) from pollen assemblages in large lakes (≥100–500 ha). This model corrects for biases in pollen percentages caused by inter‐taxonomic differences in pollen productivity and dispersal. This paper presents the first case study to validate REVEALS, using empirical data from southern Sweden. Percentage cover of modern regional vegetation in Skåne and Småland, two contrasting vegetation regions, was predicted with REVEALS for 26 key taxa, using pollen assemblages from surface sediments in 10 large lakes, and compared to the actual vegetation within 10^4^ km^2^ compiled from satellite data, forestry inventories, crop statistics, aerial photographs, and vegetation inventories. REVEALS works well in predicting the percentage cover of large vegetation units such as total trees (wooded land), total herbs (open land), total conifers and total broad‐leaved trees, and it provides reasonable estimates for individual taxa, including Pinus, Picea, Betula, Corylus, Alnus, Tilia, Salix spp., Juniperus, Poaceae, Cyperaceae, Cerealia and Secale. The results show great potential for REVEALS applications, including (1) quantitative reconstructions of past regional land cover important for palaeoclimatology and nature conservation, and (2) local‐scale reconstruction of vegetation (<1 km^2^ up to ∼ 5 km^2^ area) relevant for palaeoecology and archaeology. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.