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Historic grazing in southern New England,USA, recorded by fungal spores in lake sediments
Authors:Maria?E?Orbay-Cerrato  Email author" target="_blank">W Wyatt?OswaldEmail author  Elaine?D?Doughty  David?R?Foster  Brian?R?Hall
Institution:1.Program in Biology, Division of Biology and Medicine,Brown University,Providence,USA;2.Harvard Forest,Harvard University,Petersham,USA;3.Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies,Emerson College,Boston,USA
Abstract:Decadal-scale analyses of fungal spores in a lake-sediment core from Ware Pond, located in the town of Marblehead in northeastern Massachusetts, test the potential of this approach for reconstructing past sheep and cattle grazing in southern New England, USA. The influx of spores of Sordaria and other coprophilous taxa increases at ad 1650, which corresponds with the beginning of European settlement, and subsequent peaks in these taxa at ad 1840 coincide with maximum abundances of weedy and agricultural taxa in the pollen record. Historical data from Marblehead and neighbouring towns indicate that maximum numbers of cattle and sheep occurred at this time. These findings suggest that fungal spores in New England lake sediments can be used to reconstruct changes in grazing pressure over time at the landscape scale.
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