Modern pollen-vegetation relationships along a steep temperature gradient in the Tropical Andes of Ecuador

Authors
  • D.H. Urrego
  • S. León-Yánez
  • F. Wagner-Cremer
  • T.H. Donders
Publication date 07-2019
Journal Quaternary Research
Volume | Issue number 92 | 1
Pages (from-to) 1-13
Number of pages 13
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
The characterization of modern pollen rain assemblages along environmental gradients is an essential prerequisite for reliable interpretations of fossil pollen records. In this study, we identify pollen-vegetation relationships using modern pollen rain assemblages in moss polsters (n = 13) and lake sediment surface samples (n = 11) along a steep temperature gradient of 7°C (3100–4200 m above sea level) on the western Andean Cordillera, Ecuador. The pollen rain is correlated to vascular plant abundance data recorded in vegetation relevées (n = 13). Results show that pollen spectra from both moss polsters and sediment surface samples reflect changes in species composition along the temperature gradient, despite overrepresentation of upper montane forest taxa in the latter. Estimated pollen transport distance for a lake (Laguna Llaviucu) situated in a steep upper montane forest valley is 1–2 km, while a lake (Laguna Pallcacocha) in the páramo captures pollen input from a distance of up to 10–40 km. Weinmannia spp., Podocarpus spp., and Hedyosmum sp. are indicators of local upper montane forest vegetation, while Phlegmariurus spp. and Plantago spp. are indicators for local páramo vegetation.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Pollen counts and vegetation composition data of surface samples from Cajas National park, Ecuadorian Andes
Published at https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2019.4
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