Pollen source areas of lakes with inflowing rivers: modern pollen influx data from Lake Baiyangdian, China


Contact
Fang.Tian [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

Comparing pollen influx recorded in traps above the surface and below the surface of Lake Baiyangdian in northern China shows that the average pollen influx in the traps above the surface is much lower, at 1210 grains cm−2 a−1 (varying from 550 to 2770 grains cm−2 a−1), than in the traps below the surface which average 8990 grains cm−2 a−1 (ranging from 430 to 22310 grains cm−2 a−1). This suggests that about 12% of the total pollen influx is transported by air, and 88% via inflowing water. If hydrophyte pollen types are not included, the mean pollen influx in the traps above the surface decreases to 470 grains cm−2 a−1 (varying from 170 to 910 grains cm−2 a−1) and to 5470 grains cm−2 a−1 in the traps below the surface (ranging from 270 to 12820 grains cm−2 a−1), suggesting that the contribution of waterborne pollen to the non-hydrophyte pollen assemblages in Lake Baiyangdian is about 92%. When trap assemblages are compared with sediment–water interface samples from the same location, the differences between pollen assemblages collected using different methods are more significant than differences between assemblages collected at different sample sites in the lake using the same trapping methods. We compare the ratios of terrestrial pollen and aquicolous pollen types (T/A) between traps in the water and aerial traps, and examine pollen assemblages to determine whether proportions of long-distance taxa (i.e. those known to only grow beyond the estimated aerial source radius); these data suggest that the pollen source area of this lake is composed of three parts, an aerial component mainly carried by wind, a fluvial catchment component transported by rivers and another waterborne component transported by surface wash. Where the overall vegetation composition within the ‘aerial catchment’ is different from that of the hydrological catchment, the ratio between aerial and waterborne pollen influx offers a method for estimating the relative importance of these two sources, and therefore a starting point for defining a pollen source area for a lake with inflowing rivers.



Item Type
Article
Authors
Divisions
Primary Division
Programs
Primary Topic
Publication Status
Published
Eprint ID
41941
DOI 10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.01.019

Cite as
Xu, Q. , Tian, F. , Bunting, M. J. , Li, Y. , Ding, W. , Cao, X. and He, Z. (2012): Pollen source areas of lakes with inflowing rivers: modern pollen influx data from Lake Baiyangdian, China , Quaternary Science Reviews, 37 , pp. 81-91 . doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.01.019


Download
[thumbnail of TianQSR.pdf]
Preview
PDF
TianQSR.pdf

Download (1MB) | Preview
Cite this document as:

Share


Citation

Geographical region

Research Platforms
N/A

Campaigns
N/A


Actions
Edit Item Edit Item