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Potentials and limitations of fluviomarine pollen records to reconstruct spatiotemporal changes in coastal ecosystems during the Holocene: A case of study from Ría de Vigo (NW Iberia)
Castro Parada, A.; Cazás, N.; Cartelle, V.; Ferreiro da Costa, J.; Martínez-Carreño, N.; García-Gil, S.; Muñoz Sobrino, C. (2025). Potentials and limitations of fluviomarine pollen records to reconstruct spatiotemporal changes in coastal ecosystems during the Holocene: A case of study from Ría de Vigo (NW Iberia). Land 14(3): 540. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land14030540
In: Land. MDPI AG: Basel. e-ISSN 2073-445X
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    fluviomarine systems; pollen evidence; vegetation reconstruction; sedimentary environments; taphonomy

Authors  Top 
  • Castro Parada, A.
  • Cazás, N.
  • Cartelle, V.
  • Ferreiro da Costa, J.
  • Martínez-Carreño, N.
  • García-Gil, S.
  • Muñoz Sobrino, C.

Abstract
    The study of marine and terrestrial palynomorphs in fluviomarine environments has been successfully used in combination with different geophysical approaches to understand high-resolution relative sea-level oscillations and to reconstruct the environmental changes affecting estuaries and adjacent inland ecosystems. However, erosion during the postglacial marine transgression frequently causes sedimentary discontinuities or may lead to the redeposition of ancient upland sediments, including secondary, recycled and rebedded pollen. Therefore, a robust seismic and chronological control of the sedimentary facies is essential. In addition, studies of modern pollen sedimentation and its relationship to contemporaneous vegetation are valuable for obtaining a more realistic interpretation of the sedimentary evidence. To explore the significance of the experimental evidence obtained and to support the interpretation of sedimentary records from the same basin, we analysed a large set of modern pollen data from the Ría de Vigo (NW Iberia). The pollen samples derived from different sedimentary environments were compared with the local and regional vegetation cover. Pollen evidence from the various limnetic systems studied allows the identification of major vegetation types in the basin. However, in all the cases, the reconstructed relative pollen contributions of each vegetation unit are often distorted by the overrepresentation of certain anemophilous pollen types, the underrepresentation of some entomophilous species, and the specific taphonomy of each site of sedimentation. The ability of the seabed pollen evidence to represent the modern deciduous and alluvial forests, as well as the saltmarsh vegetation onshore, increases in the shallowest points of the ria (shallower than −10 m). Conversely, pastures and crops are better represented at intermediate depths (shallower than −30 m), while scrubland vegetation is better represented in samples at more than 20 m below modern sea level. It is concluded that shallow seabed pollen can provide information on the main elements of the modern vegetation cover of the emerged basin, including the main elements of the vegetation cover. However, the selection of the most suitable subtidal sites for coring, combined with pollen data from several environmental contexts, is critical for achieving an accurate reconstruction of the changing conditions of the emerged basin over time.

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