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Featured researches published by Anna-Kari Trondman.


Global Change Biology | 2015

Pollen-based quantitative reconstructions of Holocene regional vegetation cover (plant-functional types and land-cover types) in Europe suitable for climate modelling

Anna-Kari Trondman; Marie-José Gaillard; Florence Mazier; Shinya Sugita; Ralph Fyfe; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Claire Twiddle; Philip Barratt; H. J. B. Birks; Anne E. Bjune; Leif Björkman; Anna Broström; Chris Caseldine; Rémi David; John Dodson; Walter Dörfler; E. Fischer; B. van Geel; Thomas Giesecke; Tove Hultberg; L. Kalnina; Mihkel Kangur; P. van der Knaap; Tiiu Koff; Petr Kuneš; Per Lagerås; Małgorzata Latałowa; Jutta Lechterbeck; Chantal Leroyer; Michelle Leydet

We present quantitative reconstructions of regional vegetation cover in north-western Europe, western Europe north of the Alps, and eastern Europe for five time windows in the Holocene [around 6k, 3k, 0.5k, 0.2k, and 0.05k calendar years before present (bp)] at a 1° × 1° spatial scale with the objective of producing vegetation descriptions suitable for climate modelling. The REVEALS model was applied on 636 pollen records from lakes and bogs to reconstruct the past cover of 25 plant taxa grouped into 10 plant-functional types and three land-cover types [evergreen trees, summer-green (deciduous) trees, and open land]. The model corrects for some of the biases in pollen percentages by using pollen productivity estimates and fall speeds of pollen, and by applying simple but robust models of pollen dispersal and deposition. The emerging patterns of tree migration and deforestation between 6k bp and modern time in the REVEALS estimates agree with our general understanding of the vegetation history of Europe based on pollen percentages. However, the degree of anthropogenic deforestation (i.e. cover of cultivated and grazing land) at 3k, 0.5k, and 0.2k bp is significantly higher than deduced from pollen percentages. This is also the case at 6k in some parts of Europe, in particular Britain and Ireland. Furthermore, the relationship between summer-green and evergreen trees, and between individual tree taxa, differs significantly when expressed as pollen percentages or as REVEALS estimates of tree cover. For instance, when Pinus is dominant over Picea as pollen percentages, Picea is dominant over Pinus as REVEALS estimates. These differences play a major role in the reconstruction of European landscapes and for the study of land cover-climate interactions, biodiversity and human resources.


Archive | 2015

Causes of Regional Change—Land Cover

Marie-José Gaillard; Thomas Kleinen; Patrick Samuelsson; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Johan Bergh; Jed O. Kaplan; Anneli Poska; Camilla Sandström; Gustav Strandberg; Anna-Kari Trondman; Anna Wramneby

Anthropogenic land-cover change (ALCC) is one of the few climate forcings for which the net direction of the climate response over the last two centuries is still not known. The uncertainty is due to the often counteracting temperature responses to the many biogeophysical effects and to the biogeochemical versus biogeophysical effects. Palaeoecological studies show that the major transformation of the landscape by anthropogenic activities in the southern zone of the Baltic Sea basin occurred between 6000 and 3000/2500 cal year BP. The only modelling study of the biogeophysical effects of past ALCCs on regional climate in north-western Europe suggests that deforestation between 6000 and 200 cal year BP may have caused significant change in winter and summer temperature. There is no indication that deforestation in the Baltic Sea area since AD 1850 would have been a major cause of the recent climate warming in the region through a positive biogeochemical feedback. Several model studies suggest that boreal reforestation might not be an effective climate warming mitigation tool as it might lead to increased warming through biogeophysical processes.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Europe’s lost forests: a pollen-based synthesis for the last 11,000 years

Neil Roberts; Ralph Fyfe; Jessie Woodbridge; Marie-José Gaillard; Basil A. S. Davis; Jed O. Kaplan; Laurent Marquer; Florence Mazier; Anne Brigitte Nielsen; Shinya Sugita; Anna-Kari Trondman; Michelle Leydet

Abstract8000 years ago, prior to Neolithic agriculture, Europe was mostly a wooded continent. Since then, its forest cover has been progressively fragmented, so that today it covers less than half of Europe’s land area, in many cases having been cleared to make way for fields and pasture-land. Establishing the origin of Europe’s current, more open land-cover mosaic requires a long-term perspective, for which pollen analysis offers a key tool. In this study we utilise and compare three numerical approaches to transforming pollen data into past forest cover, drawing on >1000 14C-dated site records. All reconstructions highlight the different histories of the mixed temperate and the northern boreal forests, with the former declining progressively since ~6000 years ago, linked to forest clearance for agriculture in later prehistory (especially in northwest Europe) and early historic times (e.g. in north central Europe). In contrast, extensive human impact on the needle-leaf forests of northern Europe only becomes detectable in the last two millennia and has left a larger area of forest in place. Forest loss has been a dominant feature of Europe’s landscape ecology in the second half of the current interglacial, with consequences for carbon cycling, ecosystem functioning and biodiversity.


Climate of The Past | 2010

Holocene land-cover reconstructions for studies on land cover-climate feedbacks

Marie-José Gaillard; Shinya Sugita; Florence Mazier; Anna-Kari Trondman; Anna Broström; Thomas Hickler; Jed O. Kaplan; Erik Kjellström; Ulla Kokfelt; Petr Kuneš; C. Lemmen; Paul A. Miller; Jörgen Olofsson; Anneli Poska; Mats Rundgren; Benjamin Smith; Gustav Strandberg; Ralph Fyfe; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Teija Alenius; L. Balakauskas; Lena Barnekow; H. J. B. Birks; Anne E. Bjune; Leif Björkman; Thomas Giesecke; Kari Loe Hjelle; L. Kalnina; Mihkel Kangur; W.O. van der Knaap


Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2012

Testing the effect of site selection and parameter setting on REVEALS-model estimates of plant abundance using the Czech Quaternary Palynological Database

Florence Mazier; Marie-José Gaillard; Petr Kuneš; Shinya Sugita; Anna-Kari Trondman; Anna Broström


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2014

Holocene changes in vegetation composition in northern Europe: why quantitative pollen-based vegetation reconstructions matter

Laurent Marquer; Marie-José Gaillard; Shinya Sugita; Anna-Kari Trondman; Florence Mazier; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Ralph Fyfe; Bent Vad Odgaard; Teija Alenius; H. John B. Birks; Anne E. Bjune; Joerg Christiansen; John Dodson; Kevin J. Edwards; Thomas Giesecke; Ulrike Herzschuh; Mihkel Kangur; Sebastian Lorenz; Anneli Poska; Manuela Schult; Heikki Seppä


Climate of The Past | 2013

Regional climate model simulations for Europe at 6 and 0.2 k BP : sensitivity to changes in anthropogenic deforestation

G. Strandberg; Erik Kjellström; Anneli Poska; Sebastian Wagner; Marie-José Gaillard; Anna-Kari Trondman; A. Mauri; Basil A. S. Davis; Jed O. Kaplan; H. J. B. Birks; Anne E. Bjune; Ralph Fyfe; Thomas Giesecke; L. Kalnina; Mihkel Kangur; W.O. van der Knaap; Ulla Kokfelt; Petr Kuneš; Małgorzata Latałowa; Laurent Marquer; Florence Mazier; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Benjamin Smith; Heikki Seppä; S. Sugita


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2016

Are pollen records from small sites appropriate for REVEALS model-based quantitative reconstructions of past regional vegetation? An empirical test in southern Sweden

Anna-Kari Trondman; Marie-José Gaillard; Shinya Sugita; Leif Björkman; Annica Greisman; Tove Hultberg; Per Lagerås; Matts Lindbladh; Florence Mazier


Ecological Complexity | 2014

Creating spatially continuous maps of past land cover from point estimates: A new statistical approach applied to pollen data

Behnaz Pirzamanbein; Johan Lindström; Anneli Poska; Shinya Sugita; Anna-Kari Trondman; Ralph Fyfe; Florence Mazier; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Jed O. Kaplan; Anne E. Bjune; H. John B. Birks; Thomas Giesecke; Mikhel Kangur; Małgorzata Latałowa; Laurent Marquer; Benjamin Smith; Marie-José Gaillard


Archive | 2010

Pollen-inferred quantitative reconstructions of Holocene land-cover in NW Europe for the evaluation of past climate-vegetation feedbacks III : Evaluation of the REVEALS-based reconstructions using the Czech Republic pollen database

Florence Mazier; Petr Kuneš; Shinya Sugita; Anna-Kari Trondman; Anna Broström; Marie-José Gaillard

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Ralph Fyfe

Plymouth State University

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Anneli Poska

Tallinn University of Technology

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Gustav Strandberg

Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute

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Anne E. Bjune

Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research

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