The Development of a Diatom Database for Inferring Lake Salinity, Western Victoria, Australia: Towards a Quantitative Approach for Reconstructing Past Climates
Peter A. Gell
Australian Journal of Botany 45(3) 389 - 423
Abstract
The development of a modern data set of 156 diatom samples from salt lakes has
provided evidence of the tolerance of a large number of taxa to the salinity
of lake waters. Thirty taxa have been recorded from 30 or more samples and so
have been well characterised. A further 42 taxa have been recorded from 10 or
more samples. The lakes sampled range in salinity from the
freshwater–oligosaline boundary to well into the hypersaline range, so
the upper and lower salinity tolerance limits of many species were
investigated. Canonical correspondence analysis of the data set showed that
salinity was the most important of the tested parameters influencing the
diatom assemblages in the samples. Randomisation tests have provided
correlation values between measured and predicted salinity comparable with
those gained from other major salt lake diatom data sets, suggesting that this
set is a good predictor of lake salinity.
Full text doi:10.1071/BT96036
© CSIRO 1997





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