The history of Cunoniaceae in Australia from macrofossil evidence

被引:28
作者
Barnes, RW
Hill, RS
Bradford, JC
机构
[1] Univ Tasmania, Sch Plant Sci, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia
[2] Univ Adelaide, Dept Environm Biol, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia
[3] Missouri Bot Garden, St Louis, MO 63166 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1071/BT00036
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The macrofossil record of the plant family Cunoniaceae in Australia is summarised and reviewed where necessary by using detailed studies of the morphology of extant genera. Eleven of the 26 Cunoniaceae genera are represented in the Australian macrofossil record and include leaves and leaf fragments, foliar cuticle and reproductive structures, and range from Late Paleocene to Quaternary in age. Macrofossils show that some genera had a different or more widespread distribution in Australia during the Cenozoic, with two genera (Weinmannia and Codia) having become extinct from the continent. Changes in climate, including increasing cold, frost, dryness, seasonality, or some combination of these, or a reduction in vegetation disturbance regimes (e.g. volcanism, uplifting, landslips), may be implicated in the regional or continental extinctions demonstrated by the macrofossil record. Many extant genera (Schizomeria, Vesselowskya, Callicoma, Ceratopetalum, Acsmithia, Codia) had evolved by the Early Oligocene or earlier (Eucryphia, Late Paleocene; Ceratopetalum, Middle Eocene), perhaps with generic diversification more or less complete by the end of the Early Cenozoic or earlier. A Cretaceous origin of the family is possible, and may account for its widespread distribution on Southern Hemisphere landmasses, although long-distance dispersal events are required to explain some modern geographic disjunctions.
引用
收藏
页码:301 / 320
页数:20
相关论文
共 135 条
[51]  
HILL R S, 1991, Australian Systematic Botany, V4, P449, DOI 10.1071/SB9910449
[52]  
HILL R S, 1991, Australian Systematic Botany, V4, P481, DOI 10.1071/SB9910481
[53]  
Hill R. S., 1995, ECOLOGY SO CONIFERS, P10
[54]  
Hill Robert S., 1996, P11
[55]   TERTIARY NOTHOFAGUS (FAGACEAE) MACROFOSSILS FROM TASMANIA AND ANTARCTICA AND THEIR BEARING ON THE EVOLUTION OF THE GENUS [J].
HILL, RS .
BOTANICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, 1991, 105 (01) :73-112
[56]   AN EARLY TERTIARY MACROFLORA FROM WEST DALE, SOUTHWESTERN AUSTRALIA [J].
HILL, RS ;
MERRIFIELD, HE .
ALCHERINGA, 1993, 17 (3-4) :285-326
[57]   Dacrycarpus (Podocarpaceae) macrofossils from Miocene sediments at Elands, eastern Australia [J].
Hill, RS ;
Whang, SS .
AUSTRALIAN SYSTEMATIC BOTANY, 2000, 13 (03) :395-408
[58]   RECONSTRUCTION OF THE OLIGOCENE VEGETATION AT PIONEER, NORTHEAST TASMANIA [J].
HILL, RS ;
MACPHAIL, MK .
ALCHERINGA, 1983, 7 (3-4) :281-299
[59]   DISCOVERY OF NOTHOFAGUS FRUITS CORRESPONDING TO AN IMPORTANT TERTIARY POLLEN TYPE [J].
HILL, RS .
NATURE, 1987, 327 (6117) :56-58
[60]   LAURACEOUS LEAVES FROM THE EOCENE OF NERRIGA, NEW-SOUTH-WALES [J].
HILL, RS .
ALCHERINGA, 1986, 10 (3-4) :327-351