Abstract

Sediment diatoms are widely used to track environmental histories of lakes and their watersheds, but merging datasets generated by different researchers for further large-scale studies is challenging because of taxonomic discrepancies caused by rapidly evolving diatom nomenclature and taxonomic concepts. We collated five datasets of lake sediment diatoms from the Northeastern USA using a harmonization process which included updating synonyms, tracking the identity of inconsistently identified taxa, and grouping those that could not be resolved taxonomically. Each harmonization step led to an increase in variation explained by environmental variables and a parallel reduction of variation attributable to taxonomic inconsistency. To maximize future use of the data and underlying specimens we provide the original and harmonized counts for 1327 core samples from 607 lakes, name translation schemes, sample metadata, specimen museum locations, and the Northeast Lakes Voucher Flora, which is a set of light microscope images grouped into 1154 morphological operational taxonomic units. Post-hoc harmonization enables data quality control when other approaches (e.g., upfront management of taxonomic consistency) are not possible.

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