Cenozoic Ampelopsis and Nekemias leaves (Vitaceae, Ampelopsideae) from Eurasia: Paleobiogeographic and paleoclimatic implications

Author:

Tosal Aixa123ORCID,Vicente Alba1245,Denk Thomas6

Affiliation:

1. Departament de Dinàmica de la Terra i de l′Oceà (DDTO), Facultat de Ciències de la Terra Universitat de Barcelona (UB) C/de Martí Franqués s/n Barcelona 08028 Spain

2. Institut de Recerca de la Biodiversitat (IRBio) Universitat de Barcelona (UB) C/de Martí Franqués s/n Barcelona 08028 Spain

3. Centre de Recherche sur la Paléobiodiversité et les Paléoenvironnements (CR2P‐UMR 7207), Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Muséum National d′Histoire Naturelle (MNHN) Sorbonne Université (UPMC) 57 rue Cuvier, Cedex 05 Paris 75231 France

4. Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN), Av. Instituto Politécnico Nacional s/n, Colonia Playa Palo de Santa Rita La Paz 23096 Mexico

5. Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont, ICTA‐ICP Building, Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona (UAB) c/de les Columnes s/n Cerdanyola del Vallès 08193 Spain

6. Department of Palaeobiology Swedish Museum of Natural History Box 50007 Stockholm 10405 Sweden

Abstract

AbstractWe describe a new species of Ampelopsideae (Vitaceae), Nekemias mucronata sp. nov., from the Rupelian of Cervera (Spain) and revise another fossil species, Ampelopsis hibschii, originally described from Germany. Comparison with extant Ampelopsideae suggests that the North American species Nekemias arborea is most similar to Nekemias mucronata while the East Mediterranean Ampelopsis orientalis is the closest living relative of A. hibschii. Our review of fossil data indicates that, during the Eocene, four species of Ampelopsideae occurred in Eurasia, that is, N. mucronata in the Czech Republic, A. hibschii in Kazakhstan, and two fossil species in the Far East (Ampelopsis cercidifolia and Ampelopsis protoheterophylla). In the Oligocene, a new species, Ampelopsis schischkinii, appeared in Kazakhstan; meanwhile, N. mucronata spread eastwards and southwards, and A. hibschii mainly grew in Central Europe. In the late Oligocene, N. mucronata became a relict in the Iberian Peninsula and Nekemias might have persisted in Western Eurasia until the latest Miocene (“Ampelopsis” abkhasica). The last occurrence of A. hibschii was in the Middle Miocene in Bulgaria, probably a refuge of humid temperate taxa, along with Ampelopsis aff. cordata. Carpological remains suggest that this lineage persisted in Europe at least until the Pleistocene. Our data confirm previous notions of the North Atlantic and Bering land bridges being important dispersal routes for Ampelopsideae. However, such dispersion probably occurred during the Paleogene rather than the Neogene, as previously suggested. A single species of Ampelopsideae, A. orientalis, has survived in Western Eurasia, which appears to have been linked to a biome shift.

Publisher

Wiley

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