University of Wollongong
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Woody plant phytolith morphology and representation in surface sediments across the Northern Territory, Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 14:45 authored by Kelsey C Boyd, Carlos E Cordova, Haidee R Cadd, Cassandra Rowe, Tim J Cohen
Phytoliths are a good tool for investigating vegetation change in northern Australia. However, there is a lack of phytolith reference material across the Australian continent, particularly for woody plants. The development of reference material from woody plants is critical to understand regional patterns of phytolith production and preservation. This study analyses phytolith material from 40 woody plants to examine morphological and anatomical variation in phytolith production among Australian plant families. This is paired with phytolith assemblages from nine surface sediment samples to assess the representation and preservation of woody plant phytolith morphotypes. All woody plant species examined produce identifiable phytolith morphotypes, but most morphotypes cannot be differentiated between woody eudicots, monocots, and conifers. However, some woody plant morphotypes do have good potential for taxonomic or anatomical discrimination of plant groups. The analysis of surface sediment phytolith assemblages reveals that not all woody plant morphotypes preserve equally in surface sediments, potentially restricting their ability for taxonomic discrimination. Finally, the relevance of phytolith morphotypes for palaeoecological reconstruction is discussed.

Funding

University of Wollongong (CE170100015)

History

Journal title

Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology

Volume

329

Language

English

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