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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of low count sums on quantitative environmental reconstructions: an example using subfossil chironomids

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TLDR
In this article, the effect of low count sums on reconstructed temperatures is investigated using an existing data set, and simulated low counts by randomly picking subsets of head capsules from surface-sediment samples with a high number of specimens.
Abstract
The concentrations of chironomid remains in lake sediments are very variable and, therefore, chironomid stratigraphies often include samples with a low number of counts. Thus, the effect of low count sums on reconstructed temperatures is an important issue when applying chironomid‐temperature inference models. Using an existing data set, we simulated low count sums by randomly picking subsets of head capsules from surface‐sediment samples with a high number of specimens. Subsequently, a chironomid‐temperature inference model was used to assess how the inferred temperatures are affected by low counts. The simulations indicate that the variability of inferred temperatures increases progressively with decreasing count sums. At counts below 50 specimens, a further reduction in count sum can cause a disproportionate increase in the variation of inferred temperatures, whereas at higher count sums the inferences are more stable. Furthermore, low count samples may consistently infer too low or too high temperatures and, therefore, produce a systematic error in a reconstruction. Smoothing reconstructed temperatures downcore is proposed as a possible way to compensate for the high variability due to low count sums. By combining adjacent samples in a stratigraphy, to produce samples of a more reliable size, it is possible to assess if low counts cause a systematic error in inferred temperatures.

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Book ChapterDOI

Midges: Chironomidae and Related Diptera

TL;DR: Among insects, the chitinous larval remains of the order Diptera (true flies) are most abundant in lake sediments, and thus have proven to be especially useful in palaeoenviron-mental studies.

A chironomid-based Holocene summer air temperature reconstruction from the

TL;DR: In this article, a quantitative chironomid-July air temperature inference model based on surface sediments from 81 Swiss lakes and applied it to the Holocene subfossil chironmid record of Hinterburgsee, a small subalpine lake in the northern Swiss Alps (present-day mean July air temperature of 11.3 °C).
Journal ArticleDOI

A chironomid-based Holocene summer air temperature reconstruction from the Swiss Alps

TL;DR: The authors developed a quantitative chironomid-July air temperature inference model based on surface sediments from 81 Swiss lakes and applied it to the Holocene subfossil chironmid record of Hinterburgsee, a small subalpine lake in the northern Swiss Alps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Minimum count sums for charcoal concentration estimates in pollen slides: accuracy and potential errors

TL;DR: In this paper, the reliability of charcoal-concentration estimates based on different counting sums, using simulated low-to high-count samples, was analyzed, and it was shown that the variability of inferred charcoal concentrations increases progressively with decreasing sums.
Journal ArticleDOI

Holocene temperature changes in northern Fennoscandia reconstructed from chironomids using Bayesian modelling

TL;DR: In this article, the recently developed Bayesian multinomial calibration model, Bummer, was applied to the fossil chironomid assemblages of a lake situated at the present tree-line in northern Fennoscandia to reconstruct patterns in Holocene climates.
References
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M. O. Hill
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, the advantages and disadvantages of the preferred technique (weighted averaging partial least squares) are reviewed and the problems in model selection are discussed and the need for evaluation and validation of reconstructions is emphasised.
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