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Patterns of postglacial vegetation establishment clarified by lacustrine sedaDNA from Baffin Island, Arctic Canada

Authors :
Martha K. Raynolds
Morten E. Allentoft
Bianca Fréchette
Gifford H. Miller
Sarah E. Crump
Michael Bunce
Jonathan H. Raberg
Gregory A. de Wet
Matthew Power
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

The colonization of recently deglaciated landscapes by tundra vegetation during the early Holocene is an important case study for understanding possible rates and patterns of plant migration in a rapidly warming world. Fossil pollen in lake sediment has traditionally served as the primary tool for reconstructing paleovegetation and understanding postglacial biogeography. However, because pollen can be wind-transported long distances and, in some cases, reworked from older deposits on the landscape, pollen-based vegetation histories can sometimes obscure the true history of plant colonization. In contrast, lacustrine sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA) is sourced locally and is less likely to be adequately preserved through reworking events, thus making it a more reliable proxy for determining the precise timing of plant colonization. Here, we present three sedaDNA records from Holocene lake sediment across southern Baffin Island, Arctic Canada, that clarify the timing of postglacial vegetation changes. In particular, DNA from the subarctic shrub Betula (dwarf birch) first appears thousands of years after deglaciation in all three lake catchments, suggesting delayed colonization despite its strong pollen signal in early postglacial sediments. While moderate levels of Alnus (alder) pollen characterize early to mid-Holocene lake sediments from the region, sedaDNA suggests that Alnus was likely not present in any of the three lake catchments during the Holocene. In addition, aquatic plant community changes indicated by sedaDNA faithfully reflect the timing of early Holocene warmth in the region, highlighting the potential utility of aquatic plant DNA as a qualitative temperature proxy. We suggest that ancient plant DNA in lake sediment provides key paleoecological information that is distinct from traditional proxy records, particularly during periods of relatively rapid ecological change like the early Holocene.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........92443ea1a4c7a1701d0942ef3e7418ed
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10391