On the use of spores of coprophilous fungi in sediments to indicate past herbivore presence
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| Publication date | 09-2022 |
| Journal | Quaternary |
| Article number | 30 |
| Volume | Issue number | 5 | 3 |
| Number of pages | 23 |
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| Abstract |
Fungal spores that grew on the faeces of herbivores in the past can be
extracted from sediments and used to identify the presence of herbivores
in former ecosystems. This review: (i) examines the factors that should
be considered when interpreting these fungal spores, (ii) assesses the
degree to which they can be used to estimate past herbivore populations
and biomass density change, and (iii) identifies gaps in our current
understanding that limit, or confound, the information that can be
extracted from the fungal spore record. We focus on the life cycles of
coprophilous fungi and highlight the importance of understanding spore
dispersal mechanisms to ensure robust palaeoecological interpretation.
We then discuss how variation in methodological approaches across
studies and modifications can influence comparability between studies.
The key recommendations that emerge relate to: (i) improving our
understanding of the relationship between spores of coprophilous fungi
(SCF) and herbivores through the study of the coprophilous fungi
succession; (ii) refining our understanding of how climate and
environment parameters effect fungal spore abundance, with particular
reference to estimating past herbivore biomass density; and (iii)
enhancing sedimentary DNA (SedaDNA) analysis to identify SCF that do not
allow preservation in a way that allows visual identification. To
further this field of study and provide more robust insights into
herbivores in the past, we suggest that additional research is required
to help to reduce bias during the preparation process, that concertation
metrics are used for the quantification of SCF, and that multiple cores
should be taken in each site and multiproxy analysis should be
utilised.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.3390/quat5030030 |
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