Publication

Response of testate amoebae to a late Holocene ecosystem shift in an Amazonian peatland

To date there have only been two studies using testate amoebae as palaeoecological indicators in tropical peatlands. Here we present a new ∼500-year testate amoeba record from San Jorge, a domed peatland in Peruvian Amazonia, which has a well-constrained vegetation history based on pollen analysis. We observe a major shift from Hyalosphenia subflava to Cryptodifflugia oviformis-dominated communities at ∼50 cm depth (c. AD 1760), which suggests a change to drier conditions in the peatland. The application of a statistical transfer function also suggests a deepening of the water table at this time. The transition in the microbial assemblage occurs at a time when pollen and geochemical data indicate drier conditions (reduced influence of river flooding), leading to an ecosystem switch to more ombrotrophic-like conditions in the peatland. Our work illustrates the potential of testate amoebae as important tools in tropical peatland palaeoecology, and the power of multiproxy approaches for understanding the long-term development of tropical peatlands.
  • Authors: Swindles, G.T., Kelly, T.J., Roucoux, K.H., Lawson, I.T.
  • Author Affiliation: University of Leeds, University of St Andrews
  • Subjects: paleoecology, rain forests, peatlands, tropical forests, microbial communities, ecology
  • Publication type: Journal Article
  • Source: European Journal of Protistology 64: 13-19
  • Year: 2018
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejop.2018.03.002
Latest posts

PARTNERS

Founding member states
Republic of Indonesia Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of Peru
Coordinating partners
Ministry of Environment and Forestry Republic of Indonesia CIFOR UN Environment FAO