City
Epaper

Researchers use pollen from Kaziranga National Park to decode climate change

By IANS | Updated: February 24, 2024 17:30 IST

New Delhi, Feb 24 Indian researchers have explored how pollen and non-pollen palynomorphs (NPPs) of Kaziranga National Park ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Feb 24 Indian researchers have explored how pollen and non-pollen palynomorphs (NPPs) of Kaziranga National Park (KNP) can help in the interpretation of climate in the region.

The KNP in Assam, a corridor for immigration of members of the Indo-Malayan fauna into the Indian sub-region, is a critical reserve for tropical species, having served as a gene reservoir for these taxa during glacial periods.

To understand the effect of climate change on the biodiversity loss in national parks, scientists from the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), an autonomous institution of the Department of Science and Technology (DST) developed a modern analogue dataset based on NPPs from different vegetation settings across the KNP.

The study evaluates both the strength and weaknesses of the biotic proxy and assesses how reliably modern pollen and NPP analogue can identify different ecological environments and could be used as a baseline in interpreting Late Quaternary palaeo-environmental and ecological changes more accurately in this region.

Modern pollen analogue being a prerequisite in this high precipitation tropical region for deciphering the past and future climatic scenario, the palaeo-ecological data would assist in better understanding the sustainable future projections in and around the national park.

Compared to single-proxy interpretation, the combination of pollen and NPP can reveal more detailed information and strengthen subsequent palaeo-environmental reconstructions.

The research is the first holistic approach towards developing modern pollen and NPP analogue that would be an accurate reference tool for the past herbivory and ecological studies in the tropical region of northeast India.

The study published in the journal Holocene for the first time helps in identifying marker pollen taxa recovered from surface soil samples in relation to the different vegetation and land-use from KNP.

It could help public and wildlife management agencies to understand the association of flora and fauna, especially herbivores in national parks to conserve it for the current and future prospect, thus informing the National Biodiversity Mission.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentLokesh Kanagaraj thanks 'Coolie' star Rajinikanth for 'bringing his vision to life through him'

CricketChris Morris tips Aiden Markram to be one of the big draws at SA20 auction

MaharashtraMaharashtra Shocker: Husband and Wife Murdered in Dharashiv Over Land Dispute in Broad Daylight

MumbaiMumbai Crime Branch Bust International Gang Behind Cyberfraud and Online Gaming Scams; 5 Arrested

AurangabadAwareness session on new ESIC schemes held at Massia Waluj

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyPiyush Goyal inaugurates new building to boost India's Intellectual Property ecosystem

TechnologyICICI Bank reduces minimum average balance for new savings accounts after backlash

TechnologyDeepak Nitrite's Q1 profit tanks 45 pc, revenue declines

TechnologyHG Infra’s Q1 profit falls 39 pc to Rs 99.2 crore

TechnologyIndia achieves historic milestone of 100 GW solar PV module manufacturing capacity