The evolution of a coastal peatland at Byron Bay, Australia: Multi-proxy evidence from the microfossil record

Peatlands are highly valuable ecosystems for their ecological functions as well as their economic and societal values (Charman 2002). Yet they are also highly vulnerable to degradation by a range of anthropogenic activities and climate change (Charman 2002; Gorham and Rochefort 2003; O’Connell 2003;...

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Hauptverfasser: Kathryn H. Taffs, Brendan Logan, Jeff F. Parr, Geraldine E. Jacobsen
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Brendan Logan
Jeff F. Parr
Geraldine E. Jacobsen
description Peatlands are highly valuable ecosystems for their ecological functions as well as their economic and societal values (Charman 2002). Yet they are also highly vulnerable to degradation by a range of anthropogenic activities and climate change (Charman 2002; Gorham and Rochefort 2003; O’Connell 2003; Rochefort et al. 2003; Vasander et al. 2003). In Australia, peatlands are an unusual and infrequent component of the landscape (Whinam et al. 2003), mostly distributed in the alpine areas of the southeast of the continent (Clarke and Martin 1999). However, areas of peat also occur in the coastal lowlands, often in dune swales, both on
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identifier ISBN: 1921666803
ispartof Altered Ecologies, 2010, p.429
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source DOAB: Directory of Open Access Books; JSTOR eBooks: Open Access
subjects Absolute dating methods
Algae
Applied sciences
Aquatic ecology
Biological sciences
Biology
Botany
Carbonaceous materials
Coastal ecology
Diatoms
Earth sciences
Ecology
Geochronology
Geography
Geology
Geomorphology
History
History of Antarctica
Land
Marine botany
Marine ecology
Materials
Materials science
Palynology
Peat
Peatlands
Petrology
Phycology
Physical sciences
Phytoliths
Plant ecology
Pollen
Rangelands
Regional histories
Rocks
Sediment core samples
Sedimentary petrology
Sediments
Vegetation
Wetlands
title The evolution of a coastal peatland at Byron Bay, Australia: Multi-proxy evidence from the microfossil record
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