Evolutionary trends and ecological differentiation in early Cenozoic Fagaceae of western North America.

Author(s)
Johannes Bouchal, Reinhard Zetter, Fridgeir Grimsson, Thomas Denk
Abstract

Premise of the study: The early Cenozoic was a key period of evolutionary radiation in Fagaceae. The common notion is that species thriving in the modern summer-dry climate of California originated in climates with ample summer rain during the Paleogene. Methods: We investigated in situ and dispersed pollen of Fagaceae from the uppermost Eocene Florissant fossil beds, Colorado, United States, using a combined light and scanning electron microscopy approach. Key results: Pollen types of Castaneoideae with affinities to modern Castanea, Lithocarpus, and Castanopsis were recognized. Pollen of the extinct genus Fagopsis represents a derived type of Castaneoideae pollen. Infrageneric groups of Quercus were well represented, including pollen of Group Protobalanus. The taxonomic diversity of Fagaceae and of the total plant assemblage indicates a mosaic of microclimates, that range from pronounced to weakly seasonal climates and depend on slope aspect and elevation. Continental climatic conditions may have triggered the evolution of sclerophyllous leaves and adaptive radiation in Quercus and other taxa thriving today under distinctly summer-dry and winter-dry climates. Conclusions: Vegetation types similar to modern vegetation belts of the Coastal Ranges (chaparral, nemoral conifer forest) were established in the Front Range in the late Eocene. Coeval plant assemblages from the Coastal Ranges of California indicate distinctly subtropical, moist climates. Hence, characteristic elements found today in the summer-dry and winter-dry climates of Pacific North America (Quercus Group Protobalanus, Notholithocarpus) may opportunistically have dispersed into their modern ranges later in the Cenozoic. This scenario is in contrast to the evolution and migration patterns of their western Eurasian Mediterranean counterparts (Quercus Group Ilex).

Organisation(s)
Department of Palaeontology
External organisation(s)
Swedish Museum of Natural History
Journal
American Journal of Botany: the journal for all plant biologists
Volume
101
Pages
1332-1349
No. of pages
18
ISSN
0002-9122
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1400118
Publication date
08-2014
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
105117 Palaeobotany
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Genetics, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Plant Science
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/evolutionary-trends-and-ecological-differentiation-in-early-cenozoic-fagaceae-of-western-north-america(ba8fe39e-0a2f-43ef-b6c1-999f49a86b65).html