Search results for "ecological disturbance"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Environmental drivers and abrupt changes of phytoplankton community in temperate lake Lielais Svētiņu, Eastern Latvia, over the last Post-Glacial per…

2021

Understanding the long-term dynamics of ecological communities on the centuries-to-millennia scale is important for explaining the emergence of present-day biodiversity patterns and for predicting possible future scenarios. Fossil pigments and ancient DNA present in various sedimentary deposits can be analysed to study long-term changes in ecological communities. We analysed recent compilations of data, including fossil pigments, microfossils, and molecular inventories from the sedimentary archives, to understand the impact of gradual versus abrupt climate changes on the ecosystem status of a regional model lake over the last ~14.5 kyr. Such long and complete paleo-archives are scarce in No…

ArcheologyClimate Researchregime shiftClimate changeEastern Europeland-use changeTemperate climatestatistical modellingfossil pigmentsRegime shiftEcosystemGlacial periodEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoloceneGlobal and Planetary ChangeHolocenepaleolimnologyGlobal warmingecological disturbanceGeologyancient sedimentary DNAarticlesAbrupt climate changeEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyphototrophsgeneric anthropogenic influenceQuaternary Science Reviews
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Abrupt Alnus population decline at the end of the first millennium CE in Europe - The event ecology, possible causes and implications

2019

The study, based on the examination of 70 published and unpublished pollen profiles from Poland and supplementary data from the surrounding regions, shows that an abrupt, episodic Alnus population decline at the end of the first millennium CE was a much more widespread event than has been previously reported, spanning large areas of the temperate and boreal zones in Europe. The data from Poland suggest that the decline was roughly synchronous and most likely occurred between the 9th and 10th centuries, with strong indications for the 10th century. The pollen data indicate that human impacts were not a major factor in the event. Instead, we hypothesize that one or a series of abrupt climatic…

Phytophthora1171 Geosciences010506 paleontologyArcheologyELM-BARK BEETLE010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesKRETZSCHMARIA-DEUSTAPopulationClimate changePEAT DEPOSITSSOURCE AREAmedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesANNUALLY LAMINATED SEDIMENTSpathogen outbreakPollenmedicineLATE HOLOCENEeducationAlnus long-term population dynamics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesSupplementary dataGlobal and Planetary Changeeducation.field_of_studyCLIMATE-CHANGEEcologybiologyHEMLOCK DECLINEEcologyecological disturbancePaleontology15. Life on landpalaeoecologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation declineGeographyclimate changeRAISED BOG13. Climate actionPaleoecologyKretzschmaria deustaRaised bogFOREST PATHOGENS
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