The contemporary distribution of grasses in Australia: A process of immigration, dispersal and shifting dominance

Author:

Bryceson Susanna R.1ORCID,Hemming Kyle T. M.2ORCID,Duncan Richard P.2,Morgan John W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environment and Genetics La Trobe University Bundoora Victoria Australia

2. Centre for Conservation Ecology and Genomics, Institute for Applied Ecology University of Canberra Bruce Australian Capital Territory Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimLittle is known about the distribution of grasses throughout Australia. Using endemism as a basis for understanding biogeographical distributions, we hypothesised that contemporary species richness would be the result of environmental factors and dynamic ecological interactions spanning more than 25 Ma.LocationAustralia.TaxonGrasses.MethodsWe mapped the distribution of all Australian grass species and modelled climatic and landscape correlates according to photosynthetic type (C3or C4), endemism, age in Australia, phylogenetic lineage and traits linked to dominance, using height as a proxy. Age classes comprised ‘Ancient’ (Gondwanan), and three others related to migration during the Sunda‐Sahul Interchange (SSI): Early, Mid or Recent. In some analyses, ‘Ancient’, ‘Early SSI’ and ‘Mid SSI’ were combined into ‘Pre‐Recent SSI’.ResultsOverall, species richness of C4grasses increased with warmer mean annual temperatures, while richness of C3grasses was higher in cooler areas. Recent SSI species had strong associations with summer rains and were dominant in the continent's northeast, with Pre‐Recent SSI species concentrated in the southeast, a pattern largely reflecting photosynthetic type (C4and C3respectively). Endemic and shared species distribution patterns support a migration sequence in which most C3Pooideae and Panicoideae genera arrived in Australia before the Pliocene aridifications, followed by C4Chloridoideae as aridification increased, with C4Andropogoneae immigrating most recently across Lake Carpentaria's open habitats in the later Pleistocene. Recent SSI shared species were significantly taller than Pre‐Recent SSI endemic grasses.Main ConclusionsThe few grasses present in Australia before the Pliocene grew in cooler areas. The influx of taller Recent SSI grasses contributed to dramatic environmental changes—including creation of the northern savannas—with repercussions for resident taxa. Contemporary methods of fuel management could be promoting invasion by grass, thereby jeopardising the conditions suited to ancient taxa and threatening the region's evolutionary history.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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