Quaternary Plant Ecology Laboratory (QPEL)

The Quaternary Plant Ecology Laboratory at the University of Wyoming is a facility for investigating dynamics of plant populations and communities at timescales of decades to millennia during the last million years of earth history. Understanding these dynamics is fundamental to ecology, biogeography, paleoclimatology, earth system history, and land management. We use evidence from pollen, plant macrofossils, and charcoal preserved in sediments of lakes, wetlands, and packrat middens to study vegetational and climatic changes at timescales of centuries to millennia. Analysis of tree-rings, historical photographs, and age-structure of existing plant populations are used to study changes at finer timescales (decades to centuries). Research in the laboratory is currently funded by the National Science Foundation (Ecology and Paleoclimate Programs), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Climate and Global Change Program), and the United States Geological Survey (Biological Resources Division).

Ongoing projects in the laboratory include:

The QPEL is the home of the North American Plant Macrofossil Database, an international data cooperative aimed at compiling and distributing Quaternary plant macrofossil data for use in paleoclimatic, biogeographic, and other studies. The laboratory has a long history of pollen-vegetation calibration studies. FAGERLND, a program for pollen-vegetation calibration using the Extended R-value Models, and sample data sets are distributed by the laboratory. We are currently compiling a Pollen-Vegetation Calibration Database for distribution.

 

FACULTY / STAFF

Stephen T. Jackson, Professor of Botany