Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny

Data are given on the taxonomy and ecology of the genus.\nSome New Caledonian species grow in or descend to the lowland. Details are provided on the distribution within New Guinea. For dominance of Nothofagus, and Fagaceae in general, it is suggested that possibly symbionts may contribute to this. S...

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Main Author: Steenis, C.G.G.J. van
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1971
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Online Access:https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/525869
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spelling ftnaturalis:oai:repository.naturalis.nl:525869 2024-02-11T09:57:46+01:00 Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny Steenis, C.G.G.J. van 1971-01-01 application/pdf https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/525869 unknown https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/525869 Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 19 no. 1, pp. 65-98 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 1971 ftnaturalis 2024-01-17T23:25:02Z Data are given on the taxonomy and ecology of the genus.\nSome New Caledonian species grow in or descend to the lowland. Details are provided on the distribution within New Guinea. For dominance of Nothofagus, and Fagaceae in general, it is suggested that possibly symbionts may contribute to this. Some notes are made on regeneration and germination in New Guinea.\nA special chapter is devoted to a discussion of dispersal which appears to be extremely slow, with the implication that Nothofagus indubitably needs land for its spread, and has needed such for attaining its colossal range, encircling onwards of New Guinea the South Pacific (fossil pollen in Antarctica) to as far as southern South America. Map 1.\nAn other chapter is devoted to response of Nothofagus to the present climate. The possibility is envisaged that it could have grown along the border of the Antarctic Continent during a milder climate in the Cretaceous and Tertiary.\nThe fossil record is ample, both by macrofossils and fossil pollen. Of the three pollen types, the brassii and fusca types are already found in the Upper Cretaceous in Australia, New Zealand, and Antarctica, and in the Eocene in Fuegia the menziesii type being found hitherto not earlier than the Lower Tertiary. Table 1.\nNo reliable Nothofagus fossils have ever been found on the northern hemisphere. There it is represented by its counterpart, Fagus, with which it forms the subfamily Fagoideae of the family Fagaceae. Macrofossils of Fagus are known from the Tertiary and possibly also from the Upper Cretaceous (on the northern hemisphere to a fairly high latitude. Map 1.\nNothofagus is called a key genus for plant-geography because it meets the three criteria for safe biogeographical reasoning, viz. it has a sound taxonomy, an ample fossil record, and diaspores for which long distance dispersal is excluded.\nFagoideae occupy a remarkable hour-glass-shaped bi-hemispheric range, with the contraction in the Malesian tropics. Map 1. Whereas even at present the largest amount of ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Naturalis Institutional Repository Antarctic New Zealand Pacific The Antarctic
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language unknown
description Data are given on the taxonomy and ecology of the genus.\nSome New Caledonian species grow in or descend to the lowland. Details are provided on the distribution within New Guinea. For dominance of Nothofagus, and Fagaceae in general, it is suggested that possibly symbionts may contribute to this. Some notes are made on regeneration and germination in New Guinea.\nA special chapter is devoted to a discussion of dispersal which appears to be extremely slow, with the implication that Nothofagus indubitably needs land for its spread, and has needed such for attaining its colossal range, encircling onwards of New Guinea the South Pacific (fossil pollen in Antarctica) to as far as southern South America. Map 1.\nAn other chapter is devoted to response of Nothofagus to the present climate. The possibility is envisaged that it could have grown along the border of the Antarctic Continent during a milder climate in the Cretaceous and Tertiary.\nThe fossil record is ample, both by macrofossils and fossil pollen. Of the three pollen types, the brassii and fusca types are already found in the Upper Cretaceous in Australia, New Zealand, and Antarctica, and in the Eocene in Fuegia the menziesii type being found hitherto not earlier than the Lower Tertiary. Table 1.\nNo reliable Nothofagus fossils have ever been found on the northern hemisphere. There it is represented by its counterpart, Fagus, with which it forms the subfamily Fagoideae of the family Fagaceae. Macrofossils of Fagus are known from the Tertiary and possibly also from the Upper Cretaceous (on the northern hemisphere to a fairly high latitude. Map 1.\nNothofagus is called a key genus for plant-geography because it meets the three criteria for safe biogeographical reasoning, viz. it has a sound taxonomy, an ample fossil record, and diaspores for which long distance dispersal is excluded.\nFagoideae occupy a remarkable hour-glass-shaped bi-hemispheric range, with the contraction in the Malesian tropics. Map 1. Whereas even at present the largest amount of ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Steenis, C.G.G.J. van
spellingShingle Steenis, C.G.G.J. van
Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
author_facet Steenis, C.G.G.J. van
author_sort Steenis, C.G.G.J. van
title Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
title_short Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
title_full Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
title_fullStr Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
title_full_unstemmed Nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
title_sort nothofagus, key genus of plant geography, in time and space, living and fossil, ecology and phylogeny
publishDate 1971
url https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/525869
geographic Antarctic
New Zealand
Pacific
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
New Zealand
Pacific
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_source Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 19 no. 1, pp. 65-98
op_relation https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/525869
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