Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen

Many palynological investigations require the comparison of large collections of samples and here the optimization of the effort is crucial. A method to determine the pollen sum according to the intrinsic characteristics of the site pollen composition is proposed. Different variables such as pollen...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Madanes, N., Dadon, J.R.
Formato: JOUR
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00173134_v37_n4_p239_Madanes
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_00173134_v37_n4_p239_Madanes
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_00173134_v37_n4_p239_Madanes2023-10-03T14:14:57Z Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen Madanes, N. Dadon, J.R. methodology pollen sampling Bacteria (microorganisms) Many palynological investigations require the comparison of large collections of samples and here the optimization of the effort is crucial. A method to determine the pollen sum according to the intrinsic characteristics of the site pollen composition is proposed. Different variables such as pollen spectra, typological lists, richness, diversity, intra- and inter-sites affinities, are alternatively analyzed in order to determine the minimum sample size and the results are compared. An example of this methodology is developed for the airborne pollen from an agroecosystem in the Pampean grasslands. Increasing pollen counts from 150 to above 2700 does not yield different results among the dominant and subdominant types, which account for 70%-80% of the pollen sum. Both diversity estimates and similarity among sites are not significantly affected when quantitative coefficients are employed. As pollen counts increase, there is an increment in the number of types, but the types added with counts over 150 are always rare, their overall relative frequency never exceeding 6%. The minimum sample size obtained as shown here provides the necessary information to reconstruct the major pollen fraction of the site and it provides reliable estimates of the typologie diversity and the affinities among sites. © 1998 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. Fil:Madanes, N. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Dadon, J.R. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00173134_v37_n4_p239_Madanes
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic methodology
pollen
sampling
Bacteria (microorganisms)
spellingShingle methodology
pollen
sampling
Bacteria (microorganisms)
Madanes, N.
Dadon, J.R.
Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
topic_facet methodology
pollen
sampling
Bacteria (microorganisms)
description Many palynological investigations require the comparison of large collections of samples and here the optimization of the effort is crucial. A method to determine the pollen sum according to the intrinsic characteristics of the site pollen composition is proposed. Different variables such as pollen spectra, typological lists, richness, diversity, intra- and inter-sites affinities, are alternatively analyzed in order to determine the minimum sample size and the results are compared. An example of this methodology is developed for the airborne pollen from an agroecosystem in the Pampean grasslands. Increasing pollen counts from 150 to above 2700 does not yield different results among the dominant and subdominant types, which account for 70%-80% of the pollen sum. Both diversity estimates and similarity among sites are not significantly affected when quantitative coefficients are employed. As pollen counts increase, there is an increment in the number of types, but the types added with counts over 150 are always rare, their overall relative frequency never exceeding 6%. The minimum sample size obtained as shown here provides the necessary information to reconstruct the major pollen fraction of the site and it provides reliable estimates of the typologie diversity and the affinities among sites. © 1998 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
format JOUR
author Madanes, N.
Dadon, J.R.
author_facet Madanes, N.
Dadon, J.R.
author_sort Madanes, N.
title Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
title_short Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
title_full Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
title_fullStr Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
title_sort assessment of the minimum sample size required to characterize site-scale airborne pollen
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00173134_v37_n4_p239_Madanes
work_keys_str_mv AT madanesn assessmentoftheminimumsamplesizerequiredtocharacterizesitescaleairbornepollen
AT dadonjr assessmentoftheminimumsamplesizerequiredtocharacterizesitescaleairbornepollen
_version_ 1807322211494658048