Author:
Lee Daphne E.,Lee William G.,Mortimer Nick
Abstract
The modern New Zealand angiosperm flora has many notable characteristics, such
as a predominance of evergreen, perennial life forms, few nitrogen-fixing
species, despecialised floral features and asymmetric genus—species
relations. The origin of these features has been attributed to antiquity of
the flora, isolation and/or environmental history. Using evidence from
palynology and macrofossils, we investigate the characteristics of the
mid–late Cenozoic angiosperm flora and the impact of environmental
changes in land area and configuration, physiography and climate on the
depletion and composition of the New Zealand flora. Climatic cooling,
increasing isolation and tectonism have each acted as important environmental
filters, contributing to regional extinctions and decreasing floral diversity,
and inducing major turnover in the floristic composition of New Zealand.
During the Miocene and Pliocene at least 15 families and a minimum of 36
genera were lost from the New Zealand flora. These included a range of life
forms and physiognomically important taxa such as
Acacia, Bombax,
Casuarina, Eucalyptus,
Ilex, many Proteaceae and several palms. The extinction
and decline in richness of subtropical families was caused by the onset of
cooling conditions in the Late Miocene—Pliocene, and exacerbated by
the absence of significant land areas to act as refugia at lower latitudes.
Many of these genera/families persist today on islands to the north (e.g.
New Caledonia), reflecting mid-Cenozoic land conduits, and in Australia. The
close floristic links with New Caledonia were probably maintained by
intermittent island stepping-stones which facilitated interchange of
subtropical taxa until the Late Miocene. The Pleistocene extinction of some
genera, tolerant of warm-temperate environments (e.g.
Acacia, Eucalyptus) may be a
reflection of the fact that persistent mesic conditions favoured widespread
dominance of dense rainforest during interglacials. The loss of these groups,
containing diverse life forms and floral structures, suggests that many of the
present characteristics of the New Zealand flora reflect strong selective
pressures, mainly driven by climate change, in the Late Miocene, Pliocene and
Pleistocene, rather than events of greater geological antiquity.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
173 articles.
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