Effect of taxonomic resolution on ecological and palaeoecological inference: a test using testate amoeba water table depth transfer functions
Author(s)
Date issued
2014
In
Quaternary Science Reviews, Elsevier
Vol
91
From page
62
To page
69
Subjects
Palaeoecology Bioindication Transfer function Taxonomy Testate amoebae Quantitative ecology Peatland
Abstract
Sound taxonomy is a major requirement for quantitative environmental reconstruction using biological data. Transfer function performance should theoretically be expected to decrease with reduced taxonomic resolution. However for many groups of organisms taxonomy is imperfect and species level identification not always possible. We conducted numerical experiments on five testate amoeba water table (DWT) transfer function data sets. We sequentially reduced the number of taxonomic groups by successively merging morphologically similar species and removing inconspicuous species. We then assessed how these changes affected model performance and palaeoenvironmental reconstruction using two fossil data sets. Model performance decreased with decreasing taxonomic resolution, but this had only limited effects on patterns of inferred DWT, at least to detect major dry/wet shifts. Higher-resolution taxonomy may however still be useful to detect more subtle changes, or for reconstructed shifts to be significant.
Publication type
journal article
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