Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography

Aim We ask whether contemporary forests of the Chilean Coastal Range can be considered to be direct and conservative descendants of pre-Pleistocene palaeofloras that occurred in southern South America from the Palaeogene to early Neogene periods (65-10 Ma), maintaining foliar physiognomies that do not match their present-day climate. We also identify the most likely ancestors of present-day coastal forests. Location Coastal Range of south-central Chile (33-40 degrees S). Methods We compared leaf morphology between five representative modern floras from mid-latitude forests of the Chilean Coastal Range, and 14 Palaeogene-early Neogene palaeofloras from southern South America. We also compared the composition of biogeographical elements (defined by the modern distribution of plant genera) between fossil and present-day assemblages. Palaeoclimatic reconstructions were based on a canonical correspondence analysis between leaf morphology of modern assemblages and eight climatic variables, and tested by a Monte Carlo permutation test. We compared the relative positions of fossil and modern floras on the environmental vector space defined by Canoco, and on axes defined by instrumental and estimated temperature and precipitation data. Results According to foliar characters, Palaeogene palaeofloras were strikingly divergent from present-day coastal forests of central Chile. In contrast, two extant forest floras of the Chilean Coastal Range have a foliar morphology that resembles some late Eocene to early Miocene mixed palaeofloras, at least 23 Myr older. These two modern sites are representative of an area of the Coastal Range (36-37 degrees S) that has been highlighted for its relictual character. None of the 14 fossil floras corresponded exactly to the modern composition of phytogeographic elements, although correspondence analyses showed that mixed and Neogene subtropical fossil floras were compositionally close to the extant woody floras of coastal forests in central Chile. Main Conclusions Contemporary forests of the Chilean Coastal Range exhibit strong physiognomic resemblance to the mixed palaeofloras from 33 degrees 57' to 41 degrees 15' S, which may be the closest ancestor of the deciduous and endemic-rich Maulino forest, presently restricted to coastal areas between 36 degrees and 38 degrees S. In turn, the Neogene subtropical palaeoflora that occurred in the Proto-Andean foothills of central Chile is the likely predecessor of Mediterranean-type sclerophyllous forests of central Chile (32-33 degrees S). Despite foliar resemblance between the late pre-Pleistocene and extant forest floras, our palaeoclimatic reconstructions suggest that modern assemblages exist under climatic conditions that do not match their foliar physiognomy. We attribute this convergence in foliar morphology to the 'evolutionary inertia' of surviving lineages, favoured by the buffering effect of the coastal environment on climatic variability.

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Principais autores: Armesto, Juan J., Villagrán Moraga, Carolina, Hinojosa Opazo, Luis
Formato: Artículo de revista biblioteca
Idioma:English
Publicado em: BLACKWELL 2006-02
Assuntos:SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA,
Acesso em linha:http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119955
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spelling dig-uchile-cl-2250-1199552019-04-01T21:01:10Z Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography Armesto, Juan J. Villagrán Moraga, Carolina Hinojosa Opazo, Luis SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA Aim We ask whether contemporary forests of the Chilean Coastal Range can be considered to be direct and conservative descendants of pre-Pleistocene palaeofloras that occurred in southern South America from the Palaeogene to early Neogene periods (65-10 Ma), maintaining foliar physiognomies that do not match their present-day climate. We also identify the most likely ancestors of present-day coastal forests. Location Coastal Range of south-central Chile (33-40 degrees S). Methods We compared leaf morphology between five representative modern floras from mid-latitude forests of the Chilean Coastal Range, and 14 Palaeogene-early Neogene palaeofloras from southern South America. We also compared the composition of biogeographical elements (defined by the modern distribution of plant genera) between fossil and present-day assemblages. Palaeoclimatic reconstructions were based on a canonical correspondence analysis between leaf morphology of modern assemblages and eight climatic variables, and tested by a Monte Carlo permutation test. We compared the relative positions of fossil and modern floras on the environmental vector space defined by Canoco, and on axes defined by instrumental and estimated temperature and precipitation data. Results According to foliar characters, Palaeogene palaeofloras were strikingly divergent from present-day coastal forests of central Chile. In contrast, two extant forest floras of the Chilean Coastal Range have a foliar morphology that resembles some late Eocene to early Miocene mixed palaeofloras, at least 23 Myr older. These two modern sites are representative of an area of the Coastal Range (36-37 degrees S) that has been highlighted for its relictual character. None of the 14 fossil floras corresponded exactly to the modern composition of phytogeographic elements, although correspondence analyses showed that mixed and Neogene subtropical fossil floras were compositionally close to the extant woody floras of coastal forests in central Chile. Main Conclusions Contemporary forests of the Chilean Coastal Range exhibit strong physiognomic resemblance to the mixed palaeofloras from 33 degrees 57' to 41 degrees 15' S, which may be the closest ancestor of the deciduous and endemic-rich Maulino forest, presently restricted to coastal areas between 36 degrees and 38 degrees S. In turn, the Neogene subtropical palaeoflora that occurred in the Proto-Andean foothills of central Chile is the likely predecessor of Mediterranean-type sclerophyllous forests of central Chile (32-33 degrees S). Despite foliar resemblance between the late pre-Pleistocene and extant forest floras, our palaeoclimatic reconstructions suggest that modern assemblages exist under climatic conditions that do not match their foliar physiognomy. We attribute this convergence in foliar morphology to the 'evolutionary inertia' of surviving lineages, favoured by the buffering effect of the coastal environment on climatic variability. 2008-03-14T11:49:17Z 2008-03-14T11:49:17Z 2006-02 Artículo de revista JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY Volume: 33 Issue: 2 Pages: 331-341 Published: FEB 2006 0305-0270 http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119955 en application/pdf BLACKWELL
institution UCHILE CL
collection DSpace
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uchile-cl
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas de la UCHILE
language English
topic SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA
SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA
spellingShingle SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA
SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA
Armesto, Juan J.
Villagrán Moraga, Carolina
Hinojosa Opazo, Luis
Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
description Aim We ask whether contemporary forests of the Chilean Coastal Range can be considered to be direct and conservative descendants of pre-Pleistocene palaeofloras that occurred in southern South America from the Palaeogene to early Neogene periods (65-10 Ma), maintaining foliar physiognomies that do not match their present-day climate. We also identify the most likely ancestors of present-day coastal forests. Location Coastal Range of south-central Chile (33-40 degrees S). Methods We compared leaf morphology between five representative modern floras from mid-latitude forests of the Chilean Coastal Range, and 14 Palaeogene-early Neogene palaeofloras from southern South America. We also compared the composition of biogeographical elements (defined by the modern distribution of plant genera) between fossil and present-day assemblages. Palaeoclimatic reconstructions were based on a canonical correspondence analysis between leaf morphology of modern assemblages and eight climatic variables, and tested by a Monte Carlo permutation test. We compared the relative positions of fossil and modern floras on the environmental vector space defined by Canoco, and on axes defined by instrumental and estimated temperature and precipitation data. Results According to foliar characters, Palaeogene palaeofloras were strikingly divergent from present-day coastal forests of central Chile. In contrast, two extant forest floras of the Chilean Coastal Range have a foliar morphology that resembles some late Eocene to early Miocene mixed palaeofloras, at least 23 Myr older. These two modern sites are representative of an area of the Coastal Range (36-37 degrees S) that has been highlighted for its relictual character. None of the 14 fossil floras corresponded exactly to the modern composition of phytogeographic elements, although correspondence analyses showed that mixed and Neogene subtropical fossil floras were compositionally close to the extant woody floras of coastal forests in central Chile. Main Conclusions Contemporary forests of the Chilean Coastal Range exhibit strong physiognomic resemblance to the mixed palaeofloras from 33 degrees 57' to 41 degrees 15' S, which may be the closest ancestor of the deciduous and endemic-rich Maulino forest, presently restricted to coastal areas between 36 degrees and 38 degrees S. In turn, the Neogene subtropical palaeoflora that occurred in the Proto-Andean foothills of central Chile is the likely predecessor of Mediterranean-type sclerophyllous forests of central Chile (32-33 degrees S). Despite foliar resemblance between the late pre-Pleistocene and extant forest floras, our palaeoclimatic reconstructions suggest that modern assemblages exist under climatic conditions that do not match their foliar physiognomy. We attribute this convergence in foliar morphology to the 'evolutionary inertia' of surviving lineages, favoured by the buffering effect of the coastal environment on climatic variability.
format Artículo de revista
topic_facet SOUTHERN SOUTH-AMERICA
author Armesto, Juan J.
Villagrán Moraga, Carolina
Hinojosa Opazo, Luis
author_facet Armesto, Juan J.
Villagrán Moraga, Carolina
Hinojosa Opazo, Luis
author_sort Armesto, Juan J.
title Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
title_short Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
title_full Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
title_fullStr Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
title_full_unstemmed Are Chilean coastal forests pre-Pleistocene relicts? Evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
title_sort are chilean coastal forests pre-pleistocene relicts? evidence from foliar physiognomy, palaeoclimate, and phytogeography
publisher BLACKWELL
publishDate 2006-02
url http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119955
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