Author:
Swenson Ulf,Hill Robert S.,McLoughlin Stephen
Abstract
The evolutionary centre of origin of Nothofagus
(Nothofagaceae) remains an open question. Competing hypotheses suggest either
a South American or Australasian source area for
Nothofagus. Antarctica, once part of Gondwana and
densely vegetated in the Cretaceous, was certainly important for the
diversification of the genus but cannot be included in current modelling due
to its lack of extant species. By using Bremer’s (1992),
Ronquist’s (1994) and Hausdorf’s (1998) methods, all based on
cladistic philosophy, analyses of the modern areas of endemism being part of
the ancestral area of Nothofagus were undertaken.
Southern South America was distinctly identified as the likely ancestral area
by Bremer’s and Hausdorf’s methods. This result is supported by
the current fossil record. Ronquist’s method was not decisive and
yielded ambiguous results, suggesting a larger, combined ancestral area. These
results do not favour Australasia, or parts thereof, being an important area
for Nothofagus origin. Bremer’s and
Hausdorf’s methods identified New Zealand as the second most plausible
source area, a result partly supported by the fossil record.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
27 articles.
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