Fire and the spread of flowering plants in the Cretaceous

被引:181
作者
Bond, William J. [1 ]
Scott, Andrew C. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Town, Dept Bot, ZA-7700 Rondebosch, South Africa
[2] Univ London, Dept Earth Sci, Egham TW20 OEX, Surrey, England
关键词
angiosperm evolution; biome; carbon dioxide; charcoal; fire; palaeo-oxygen; plant functional traits; ATMOSPHERIC CO2; ANGIOSPERM DIVERSIFICATION; REPRODUCTIVE STRUCTURES; C-4; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; MIOCENE EXPANSION; FOSSIL CHARCOAL; SEED SIZE; EVOLUTION; RADIATION; ECOLOGY;
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-8137.2010.03418.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
We suggest that the spread of angiosperms in the Cretaceous was facilitated by novel fire regimes. Angiosperms were capable of high productivity and therefore accumulated flammable biomass ('fuel') more rapidly than their predecessors. They were capable of rapid reproduction, allowing populations to spread despite frequent disturbance. We evaluate the evidence for physical conditions conducive to fires in the Cretaceous. These included high temperatures, seasonally dry climate and higher atmospheric oxygen than current levels. We evaluate novel properties of angiosperms that contributed to rapid biomass accumulation, and to their ability to thrive in frequently disturbed environments. We also review direct evidence for Cretaceous fires. Charcoal mesofossils are common in Cretaceous deposits of the Northern Hemisphere. Inertinite, the charcoal component of coal, is common throughout the Cretaceous and into the Palaeocene, but declined steeply from the Eocene when angiosperm-dominated forests became widespread. Direct and indirect evidence is consistent with angiosperms initiating novel fire regimes, promoting angiosperm spread in the Cretaceous. Several traits are consistent with frequent surface fires. We suggest that forest was slow to develop until the Eocene, when fire activity dropped to very low levels. The causes and consequences of fires in the deep past warrant greater attention.
引用
收藏
页码:1137 / 1150
页数:14
相关论文
共 143 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1979, PLANT STRATEGIES VEG
[2]   The vegetative structure of a Lower Cretaceous conifer from Arkansas: further implications for morphospecies concepts in the Cheirolepidiaceae [J].
Axsmith, BJ .
CRETACEOUS RESEARCH, 2006, 27 (03) :309-317
[3]   DINOSAUR FEEDING-BEHAVIOR AND ORIGIN OF FLOWERING PLANTS [J].
BAKKER, RT .
NATURE, 1978, 274 (5672) :661-663
[4]   Did dinosaurs invent flowers? Dinosaur-angiosperm coevolution revisited [J].
Barrett, PM ;
Willis, KJ .
BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2001, 76 (03) :411-447
[5]  
Beerling D.J., 2001, Vegetation and the Terrestrial Carbon Cycle: Modelling the first 400 million years
[6]   The origin of the savanna biome [J].
Beerling, David J. ;
Osborne, Colin P. .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2006, 12 (11) :2023-2031
[7]   Limits for combustion in low O2 redefine paleoatmospheric predictions for the mesozoic [J].
Belcher, C. M. ;
McElwain, J. C. .
SCIENCE, 2008, 321 (5893) :1197-1200
[8]   Increased fire activity at the Triassic/Jurassic boundary in Greenland due to climate-driven floral change [J].
Belcher, Claire M. ;
Mander, Luke ;
Rein, Guillermo ;
Jervis, Freddy X. ;
Haworth, Matthew ;
Hesselbo, Stephen P. ;
Glasspool, Ian J. ;
McElwain, Jennifer C. .
NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2010, 3 (06) :426-429
[9]   Constraints on the thermal energy released from the Chicxulub impactor: new evidence from multi-method charcoal analysis [J].
Belcher, CM ;
Collinson, ME ;
Scott, AC .
JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2005, 162 :591-602
[10]   Fireball passes and nothing burns - The role of thermal radiation in the Cretaceous-Tertiary event: Evidence from the charcoal record of North America [J].
Belcher, CM ;
Collinson, ME ;
Sweet, AR ;
Hildebrand, AR ;
Scott, AC .
GEOLOGY, 2003, 31 (12) :1061-1064