Plant paleoecology in deep time

被引:66
作者
Dimichele, William A. [1 ]
Gastaldo, Robert A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Natl Museum Nat Hist, Smithsonian Inst, Dept Paleobiol, Washington, DC 20560 USA
[2] Colby Coll, Dept Geol, Waterville, ME 04901 USA
关键词
environmental biology; paleobotany; paleoecology; taphonomy;
D O I
10.3417/2007016
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The palcoecology of plants as a modern discipline, distinct from traditional floristics or biostratigraphy, has undergone all enormous expansion in the past 20 years. In addition to baseline studies characterizing extinct plants and plant assemblages in terms of their growth habits, environmental preferences, and patterns of association, paleoecology has converged on neoecology and represents a means to extend our basic understanding of the world and to contribute to the theoretical framework of ecology, writ large. Reconstruction of whole plants, including studies of physiology and developmental biology, and analyses of biomechanics have become mainstays of autecological studies. Assemblage studies now are informed by sophisticated taphonomic models that have helped guide sampling strategies and helped with the interpretation of statistical data. Linkages of assemblage patterns in space and time with sedimentology, geochemical proxies for atmospheric composition and climate, paleosol analyses and increasingly refined geochronological and sequence stratigrapbic data have permitted paleoecologists to examine rates and extents of vegetational response to environmental change and to time intervals of quiescent climatic conditions. Studies of plant-animal interaction, explicit consideration of phylogenetic information in assessing assemblage time-space dynamics, and examination of ecological structure in terms of developing metabolic scaling theory are all having direct impact on paleoecological as well as neoecological studies. The growth of paleoecology shows no sign of diminishment-closer linkages with neoecology are needed.
引用
收藏
页码:144 / 198
页数:55
相关论文
共 683 条
[1]  
ACKERLEY D, 1999, EVOL ECOL RES, V1, P895
[2]   Terrestrial-marine teleconnections in the Devonian: links between the evolution of land plants, weathering processes, and marine anoxic events [J].
Algeo, TJ ;
Scheckler, SE .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1998, 353 (1365) :113-128
[3]   Sedimentology and taphonomy of the Early to Middle Devonian plant-bearing beds of the Trout Valley Formation, Maine [J].
Department of Geosciences, University of Nebraska, 214 Bessey Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588-0340, United States ;
不详 .
Spec. Pap. Geol. Soc. Am., 2006, (57-78)
[4]  
Andrews H. N., 1947, ANN MISSOURI BOT GARD, V34, P119, DOI 10.2307/2394462
[5]   LEPIDOPHLOIOS - AND ONTOGENY IN ARBORESCENT LYCOPODS [J].
ANDREWS, HN ;
MURDY, WH .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 1958, 45 (07) :552-560
[6]   EARLY DEVONIAN FLORA OF TROUT VALLEY FORMATION OF NORTHERN MAINE [J].
ANDREWS, HN ;
KASPER, AE ;
FORBES, WH ;
GENSEL, PG ;
CHALONER, WG .
REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY, 1977, 23 (04) :255-285
[7]  
ARCHER A W, 1987, Palaios, V2, P609, DOI 10.2307/3514498
[8]  
AREAS NC, 1993, THESIS HARVARD U BOS
[9]   An Upper Triassic upland flora from north-central New Mexico, USA [J].
Ash, S .
REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY, 1999, 105 (3-4) :183-199
[10]   EDAPHIC ARIDITY AS A FACTOR IN ANGIOSPERM EVOLUTION [J].
AXELROD, DI .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1972, 106 (949) :311-&