Modern and fossil non-pollen palynomorphs from the Basque mountains (western Pyrenees, France): the use of coprophilous fungi to reconstruct pastoral activity
Grazing activities
[SHS.GEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography
Pyrenees
0601 history and archaeology
[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography
Modern and fossil NPPs
06 humanities and the arts
Coprophilous Ascomycetes
15. Life on land
Non-pollen palynomorphs (NPPs)
DOI:
10.1007/s00334-010-0242-6
Publication Date:
2010-04-15T09:16:19Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
This paper presents results from a modern dataset of non-pollen palynomorphs and its application to aca. 2,000 year peat record from the same area in the western Pyrenees (Basque Country, France). The modern dataset is composed of 35 surface samples (moss polsters) from a mountainous pasture-woodland landscape. Airborne fungal spores (ascospores and conidia), found dominant in the dataset, are linked to the degree of landscape openness and grazing pressure. The complete spectrum of 13 selected spore-types of dung-related Ascomycetes is positively linked with grazing pressure. However, different dung affinities between the spore-types have been identified. These are types clearly related to high grazing pressure and types with no or unclear dung indicative value. The modern dataset is used to aid interpretation of the local fossil pollen record as an independent 'proxy' to assess past pastoral dynamics. This study confirms the utility of modern nonpollen palynomorphs from terrestrial ecosystems in the reconstruction of historical local pastoral activities but also shows their limitation. It may be necessary to extend such study to wetland ecosystems and to investigate the spatial dimension of some fungal spores.
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