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The use of modelling and simulation approach in reconstructing past landscapes from fossil pollen data: a review and results from the POLLANDCAL network
Authors:Marie-José Gaillard  Shinya Sugita  M. Jane Bunting  Richard Middleton  Anna Broström  Christopher Caseldine  Thomas Giesecke  Sophie E. V. Hellman  Sheila Hicks  Kari Hjelle  Catherine Langdon  Anne-Birgitte Nielsen  Anneli Poska  Henrik von Stedingk  Sim Veski
Affiliation:1. School of Pure and Applied Natural Sciences, University of Kalmar, 39183, Kalmar, Sweden
2. Institute of Ecology, Tallinn University, TLU, Uus-Sadama 5, 10120, Tallinn, Estonia
3. Department of Geography, University of Hull, Cottingham Road, Hull, HU6 7RX, UK
4. Geobiosphere Science Centre, Lund University, S?lvegatan 12, 223 62, Lund, Sweden
5. School of Geography, Archaeology and Earth Resources, University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, Treliever Road, Penryn, Cornwall, TR11 9EZ, UK
6. Department of Geography, University of Liverpool, Roxby Building, Liverpool, L69 7ZT, UK
7. Department of Geography, University of Oulu, P.O. Box?3000, 90014, Oulu, Finland
8. Natural History Collections, University of Bergen, 5007, Bergen, Norway
9. Department of Quaternary Geology, Geological Survey of Greenland and Denmark, ?. Voldgade 10, 1350, Copenhagen, Denmark
10. Institute of Geology, Tallinn University of Technology, Ehitajate tee 5, 19086, Tallinn, Estonia
11. Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 901 83, Ume?, Sweden
Abstract:Information on past land cover in terms of absolute areas of different landscape units (forest, open land, pasture land, cultivated land, etc.) at local to regional scales is needed to test hypotheses and answer questions related to climate change (e.g. feedbacks effects of land-cover change), archaeological research, and nature conservancy (e.g. management strategy). The palaeoecological technique best suited to achieve quantitative reconstruction of past vegetation is pollen analysis. A simulation approach developed by Sugita (the computer model POLLSCAPE) which uses models based on the theory of pollen analysis is presented together with examples of application. POLLSCAPE has been adopted as the central tool for POLLANDCAL (POLlen/LANdscape CALibration), an international research network focusing on this topic. The theory behind models of the pollen–vegetation relationship and POLLSCAPE is reviewed. The two model outputs which receive greatest attention in this paper are the relevant source area of pollen (RSAP) and pollen loading in mires and lakes. Six examples of application of POLLSCAPE are presented, each of which explores a possible use of the POLLANDCAL tools and a means of validating or evaluating the models with empirical data. The landscape and vegetation factors influencing the size of the RSAP, the importance of pollen productivity estimates (PPEs) for the model outputs, the detection of small and rare patches of plant taxa in pollen records, and quantitative reconstructions of past vegetation and landscapes are discussed on the basis of these examples. The simulation approach is seen to be useful both for exploring different vegetation/landscape scenarios and for refuting hypotheses.
Keywords:POLLANDCAL network  POLLSCAPE simulation model  Pollen dispersal and deposition  Relevant source area of pollen  Quantitative reconstructions of past vegetation and landscapes
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