Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Dan J. Charman*
Research in the Northern Hemisphere shows the principal control on species
distribution and abundance of testate amoebae to be local hydrology, which in
ombrotrophic mires is linked directly to climate. Fossil faunas can therefore
be used to infer past hydrological and climatic conditions. This study
investigates whether a similar relationship can be found for New Zealand
peatlands, as a first step towards developing a method for palaeomoisture
reconstructions. Fifty-seven samples from 13 peatlands were analysed for
testate amoebae and related to site hydrology, pH and conductivity of mire
waters, climate, and vegetation type using canonical correspondence analysis
(CCA). Water table and soil moisture were the dominant factors, and their
relationship with species assemblage was modelled using four transfer
functions: weighted averaging (WA), tolerance downweighted weighted averaging
(WA-Tol), partial least squares (PLS), and weighted average partial least
squares (WA-PLS). PLS and WA-PLS performed best, and suggest that
palaeohydrology could be accurately inferred from fossil faunas. Results are
contrasted with those found in the northern peatlands.
Keywords: testate amoebae; New Zealand; peatlands; water table; soil moisture;
transfer functions
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 27, Number 4, December 1997, pp 465-483
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1702K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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