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  4. Autogenic succession, land-use change, and climatic influences on the Holocene development of a kettle-hole mire in Northern Poland

Autogenic succession, land-use change, and climatic influences on the Holocene development of a kettle-hole mire in Northern Poland

Author(s)
Lamentowicz, Mariucz
Milena Obremska
Mitchell, Edward  
Laboratoire de biodiversité du sol  
Publisher
Elsevier
Date issued
2008
In
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology
Vol
151
No
1
From page
21
To page
40
Subjects
Holocene palaeohydrology human impact testate amoebae pollen plant macrofossils Poland transfer function
Abstract
We reconstructed the Holocene developmental history of a kettle-hole peatland in the Tuchola Forest of Northern Poland, using pollen, testat amoebae and plant macrofossil indicators. Our aims were to determine the timing and pattern of autogenic succession and natural and anthropogenic influences on the peatland. Northern Poland is under mixed oceanic and continental climatic influences but has so far been less studied in a palaeoecological context than more oceanic regions of Europe. In the first terrestrial developmental phase of the mire, the testate amoebae-inferred depth to water table revealed two major dry shifts at ca. 9400 (end of lake phase) and ca. 7100 cal BP (a period of global cooling and dry shift in Western Europe). Conditions became wetter again in two steps at ca. 6700 and ca. 5800 BP after a dry event at ca. 6100 BP. The timing of the wet shift at 5800 BP corresponds to wet periods in Western Europe. Peat accumulation rates were low (0.1 mm yr<sup>− 1</sup>) between ca. 5600 and ca. 3000 BP when sedges dominated the peatland. In the last 2500 yrs surface moisture fluctuated with wet events at ca. 2750–2400, and 2000 BP, and dry events at ca. 2250–2100 and 1450 BP. After 1450 BP a trend towards wetter conditions culminated at ca. 500 cal BP, possibly caused by local deforestation. Over the mire history, pH (inferred from testate amoebae) was mostly low (around 5) with two short-lived shifts to alkaline conditions (7.5) at ca. 6100 and 1450 BP indicating a minerotrophic influence from surface run-off into the mire. Up to about 1000 BP the ecological shifts inferred from the three proxies agree with palaeoclimatic records from Poland and Western Europe. After this date, however correlation is less clear suggesting an increasing local anthropogenic impact on the mire. This study confirms that kettle-hole peatlands can yield useful palaeoenvironmental data as well as recording land-use change and calls for more comparable studies in regions are the interface between major climate influences.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/60108
DOI
10.1016/j.revpalbo.2008.01.009
-
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/14485
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Lamentowicz_Mariusz_-_Autogenic_succession_land-use_change_20100126.pdf

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