Extirpations and extinctions: a plant microfossil-based history of the demise of rainforest and wet sclerophyll communities in the Lake George basin, Southern Tablelands of NSW, south-east Australia
Autor: | Dan Clark, Geoff Hope, Michael Macphail, Brad Pillans |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Early Pleistocene biology Pleistocene Ecology Sclerophyll Edaphic Plant Science Rainforest 010502 geochemistry & geophysics biology.organism_classification 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Aridification Botany Araucaria Temperate rainforest Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Australian Journal of Botany. 68:208 |
ISSN: | 0067-1924 |
DOI: | 10.1071/bt19076 |
Popis: | Sites recording the extinction or extirpation of tropical–subtropical and cool–cold temperate rainforest genera during the Plio–Pleistocene aridification of Australia are scattered across the continent, with most preserving only partial records from either the Pliocene or Pleistocene. The highland Lake George basin is unique in accumulating sediment over c. 4 Ma although interpretation of the plant microfossil record is complicated by its size (950km2), neotectonic activity and fluctuating water levels. A comparison of this and other sites confirms (1) the extinction of rainforest at Lake George was part of the retreat of Nothofagus-gymnosperm communities across Australia during the Plio–Pleistocene; (2) communities of warm- and cool-adapted rainforest genera growing under moderately warm-wet conditions in the Late Pliocene to Early Pleistocene have no modern analogues; (3) the final extirpation of rainforest taxa at Lake George occurred during the Middle Pleistocene; and (4) the role of local wildfires is unresolved although topography, and, elsewhere, possibly edaphic factors allowed temperate rainforest genera to persist long after these taxa became extinct or extirpated at low elevations across much of eastern Australia. Araucaria, which is now restricted to the subtropics–tropics in Australia, appears to have survived into Middle Pleistocene time at Lake George, although the reason remains unclear. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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