Study of pollen and other acid-resistant microoscopic organic material
Palynology is the study of microorganisms and microscopic fragments of mega-organisms that are composed of acid-resistant organic material and occur in sediments, sedimentary rocks, and even some metasedimentary rocks. Palynomorphs are the microscopic, acid-resistant organic remains and debris produced by a wide variety of plants, animals, and Protista that have existed since the late Proterozoic.[2][3]
Palynology is quite useful in disciplines such as archeology, in honey production, and criminal and civil law.[3][4] In archaeology, palynology is widely used to reconstruct ancient paleoenvironments and environmental shifts that significantly influenced past human societies and reconstruct the diet of prehistoric and historic humans. Melissopalynology, the study of pollen and other palynomorphs in honey, identifies the sources of pollen in terms of geographical location(s) and genera of plants. This not only provides important information on the ecology of honey bees, it also an important tool in discovering and policing the criminal adultriation and mislabeling of honey and its products. Forensic palynology uses palynomorphs as evidence in criminal and civil law to prove or disprove a physical link between objects, people, and places.[4][5]
Palynomorphs
Palynomorphs are broadly defined as the study of organic remains, including microfossils, and microscopic fragments of mega-organisms that are composed of acid-resistant organic material and range in size between 5 and 500 micrometres. They are extracted from soils, sedimentary rocks and sediment cores, and other materials by a combination of physical (ultrasonic treatment and wet sieving) and chemical (acid digestion) procedures to remove the non-organic fraction. Palynomorphs may be composed of organic material such as chitin, pseudochitin and sporopollenin.[6]
Palynomorphs form a geological record of importance in determining the type of prehistoric life that existed at the time the sedimentary strata was laid down. As a result, these microfossils give important clues to the prevailing climatic conditions of the time. Their paleontological utility derives from an abundance numbering in millions of palynomorphs per gram in organic marine deposits, even when such deposits are generally not fossiliferous. Palynomorphs, however, generally have been destroyed in metamorphic or recrystallized rocks.[6]
Organic palynofacies considers all the acid insoluble particulate organic matter (POM), including kerogen and palynomorphs in sediments and palynological preparations of sedimentary rocks. The sieved or unsieved preparations may be examined using strew mounts on microscope slides that may be examined using a transmitted light biological microscope or ultraviolet (UV) fluorescence microscope. The abundance, composition and preservation of the various components, together with the thermal alteration of the organic matter is considered.
Palynomorph palynofacies considers the abundance, composition and diversity of palynomorphs in a sieved palynological preparation of sediments or palynological preparation of sedimentary rocks. The ratio of marinefossilphytoplankton (acritarchs and dinoflagellate cysts), together with chitinozoans, to terrestrial palynomorphs (pollen and spores) can be used to derive a terrestrial input index in marine sediments.
History
Early history
The earliest reported observations of pollen under a microscope are likely to have been in the 1640s by the English botanistNehemiah Grew,[10] who described pollen and the stamen, and concluded that pollen is required for sexual reproduction in flowering plants.
Quantitative analysis of pollen began with Lennart von Post's published work.[12] Although he published in the Swedish language, his methodology gained a wide audience through his lectures. In particular, his Kristiania lecture of 1916 was important in gaining a wider audience.[13] Because the early investigations were published in the Nordic languages (Scandinavian languages), the field of pollen analysis was confined to those countries.[14] The isolation ended with the German publication of Gunnar Erdtman's 1921 thesis. The methodology of pollen analysis became widespread throughout Europe and North America and revolutionized Quaternary vegetation and climate change research.[13][15]
Earlier pollen researchers include Früh (1885),[16] who enumerated many common tree pollen types, and a considerable number of spores and herb pollen grains. There is a study of pollen samples taken from sediments of Swedish lakes by Trybom (1888);[17]pine and spruce pollen was found in such profusion that he considered them to be serviceable as "index fossils". Georg F. L. Sarauw studied fossil pollen of middle Pleistocene age (Cromerian) from the harbour of Copenhagen.[18] Lagerheim (in Witte 1905) and C. A.Weber (in H. A. Weber 1918) appear to be among the first to undertake 'percentage frequency' calculations.
1940s to 1989
The term palynology was introduced by Hyde and Williams in 1944, following correspondence with the Swedish geologistErnst Antevs, in the pages of the Pollen Analysis Circular (one of the first journals devoted to pollen analysis, produced by Paul Sears in North America). Hyde and Williams chose palynology on the basis of the Greek words paluno meaning 'to sprinkle' and pale meaning 'dust' (and thus similar to the Latin word pollen).[19] The archive-based background to the adoption of the term palynology and to alternative names (e.g. paepalology, pollenology) has been exhaustively explored.[20] It has been argued there that the word gained general acceptance once used by the influential Swedish palynologist Gunnar Erdtman.
Pollen analysis in North America stemmed from Phyllis Draper, an MS student under Sears at the University of Oklahoma. During her time as a student, she developed the first pollen diagram from a sample that depicted the percentage of several species at different depths at Curtis Bog. This was the introduction of pollen analysis in North America;[21] pollen diagrams today still often remain in the same format with depth on the y-axis and abundances of species on the x-axis.
1990s to the 21st century
Pollen analysis advanced rapidly in this period due to advances in optics and computers. Much of the science was revised by Johannes Iversen and Knut Fægri in their textbook on the subject.[22]
Methods of studying palynomorphs
Chemical preparation
Chemical digestion follows a number of steps.[23] Initially the only chemical treatment used by researchers was treatment with potassium hydroxide (KOH) to remove humic substances; defloculation was accomplished through surface treatment or ultra-sonic treatment, although sonification may cause the pollen exine to rupture.[14] In 1924, the use of hydrofluoric acid (HF) to digest silicateminerals was introduced by Assarson and Granlund, greatly reducing the amount of time required to scan slides for palynomorphs.[24]
Palynological studies using peats presented a particular challenge because of the presence of well-preserved organic material, including fine rootlets, moss leaflets and organic litter. This was the last major challenge in the chemical preparation of materials for palynological study. Acetolysis was developed by Gunnar Erdtman and his brother to remove these fine cellulose materials by dissolving them.[25] In acetolysis the specimen is treated with acetic anhydride and sulfuric acid, dissolving cellulistic materials and thus providing better visibility for palynomorphs.[26]
Some steps of the chemical treatments require special care for safety reasons, in particular the use of HF which diffuses very fast through the skin and, causes severe chemical burns, and can be fatal.[27]
Another treatment includes kerosene flotation for chitinous materials.
Analysis
Once samples have been prepared chemically, they are mounted on microscope slides using silicon oil, glycerol or glycerol-jelly and examined using light microscopy or mounted on a stub for scanning electron microscopy.
Researchers will often study either modern samples from a number of unique sites within a given area, or samples from a single site with a record through time, such as samples obtained from peat or lake sediments. More recent studies have used the modern analog technique in which paleo-samples are compared to modern samples for which the parent vegetation is known.[28]
When the slides are observed under a microscope, the researcher counts the number of grains of each pollen taxon. This record is next used to produce a pollen diagram. These data can be used to detect anthropogenic effects, such as logging,[29] traditional patterns of land use[30] or long term changes in regional climate[31]
Organic palynofacies studies, which examine the preservation of the particulate organic matter and palynomorphs provides information on the depositional environment of sediments and depositional palaeoenvironments of sedimentary rocks.
Taxonomy and evolutionary studies. Involving the use of pollen morphological characters as source of taxonomic data to delimit plant species under same family or genus. Pollen apertural status is frequently used for differential sorting or finding similarities between species of the same taxa. This is also called Palynotaxonomy.
Allergy studies and pollen counting. Studies of the geographic distribution and seasonal production of pollen, can be used to forecast pollen conditions, helping sufferers of allergies such as hay fever.
Archaeological palynology examines human uses of plants in the past. This can help determine seasonality of site occupation, presence or absence of agricultural practices or products, and 'plant-related activity areas' within an archaeological context. Bonfire Shelter is one such example of this application.
See also
Aperture (botany) – Areas on the walls of a pollen grain, where the wall is thinner and/or softer
Aeroplankton – Tiny lifeforms floating and drifting in the air, carried by the wind
^Neuendorf, K.K.E., J.P. Mehl, Jr., and J.A. Jackson, eds., 2005, Glossary of Geology (5th ed.). Alexandria, Virginia, American Geological Institute. 779 pp. ISBN0-922152-76-4
^ abcdWilliams, G., Fensome, R.A., Miller, M. and Bujak, J., 2020. Microfossils: palynology. In Sorkhabi, R., ed., 15 pp., Encyclopedia of Petroleum Geoscience. Geneva, Switzerland, Springer Nature. 1000 pp.
^ abcdKneller, M., and Fowell, F., 2009. Palynology. In Gornitz, V., ed., pp. 766-768., Encyclopedia of Paleoclimatology and Ancient Environments. Geneva, Switzerland, Springer Dordrecht. 1049 pp.
^Laurence, A.R., and Bryant, V.M., 2009. Forensic Palynology. In Bruinsma, G., and Weisburd, D., ed., pp. 1471-1754., Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice. New York, New York, Springer Science+Business Media. 5632 pp.
^ abcTraverse, A., 2007, Paleopalynology (2nd ed.). Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Springer-Dordrecht. 813 pp. ISBN978-1-4020-5609-3
^Fonseca, Carolina; Mendonça Filho, João Graciano; Lézin, Carine; Duarte, Luís V.; Fauré, Phillipe (April 2018). "Organic facies variability during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event record of the Grands Causses and Quercy basins (southern France)". International Journal of Coal Geology. 190: 218–235. Bibcode:2018IJCG..190..218F. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2017.10.006.
^Fonseca, Carolina; Oliveira Mendonça, Joalice; Mendonça Filho, João Graciano; Lézin, Carine; Duarte, Luís V. (March 2018). "Thermal maturity assessment study of the late Pliensbachian-early Toarcian organic-rich sediments in southern France: Grands Causses, Quercy and Pyrenean basins". Marine and Petroleum Geology. 91: 338–349. Bibcode:2018MarPG..91..338F. doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2018.01.017.
^Traverse, Alfred and Sullivan, Herbert J. "The Background, Origin, and Early History of the American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists" Palynology 7: 7-18 (1983)
^ abFaegri, Knut (1973). "In memoriam O. Gunnar E. Erdtman". Pollen et Spores. 15: 5–12.
^von Post, L (1918) "Skogsträdpollen i sydsvenska torvmosslagerföljder", Forhandlinger ved de Skandinaviske naturforskeres 16. møte i Kristiania 1916: p. 433
^Früh, J (1885) "Kritische Beiträge zur Kenntnis des Torfes", Jahrb.k.k.Geol.Reichsanstalt 35
^Trybom, F (1888) "Bottenprof fran svenska insjöar", Geol.Foren.Forhandl.10
^Fægri, K. & Iversen, J. (1989) Textbook of pollen analysis. 4th ed. John Wiley & Sons, Chichester. 328 p.
^Bennett, K.D.; Willis, K.J. (2001). "Pollen". In Smol, John P.; Birks, H. John B.; Last, William M. (eds.). Tracking Environmental Change Using Lake Sediments. Volume 3: Terrestrial, algal, and siliceous indicators. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 5–32.
^Assarson, G. och E.; Granlund, E. (1924). "En metod for pollenanalys av minerogena jordarter". Geologiska Föreningen i Stockholm Förhandlingar. 46 (1–2): 76–82. doi:10.1080/11035892409444879.