Oligocene–Neogene fossil history of Asian endemic conifer genera in Japan and Korea

Atsushi Yabe, E. Jeong, Kyungsik Kim, K. Uemura
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Temporal and spatial changes of ten conifer genera that are endemic to East Asia were analyzed based on fossil data from humid temperate forests in the Japanese Islands and Korean Peninsula to elucidate the phytogeographic history, and to understand differences between those genera eliminated from the Japanese Islands and those that remained extant. All these genera, except for Thujopsis, have existed in the area since the Paleogene and remained in the Japanese islands after initial separation from the continent at the early–middle Miocene. Fossil representatives of locally extinct six genera have tendencies to adapt to wider ranges of climatic conditions than their modern relatives. Metasequoia, Glyptostrobus, and Taiwania began to change their distributions since the late Miocene possibly through habitat partitioning. Keteleeria, Pseudolarix, and Cunninghamia appeared to have expanded their habitat toward warmer conditions during the mid‐Miocene Climatic Optimum and then became restricted to warmer forest vegetation by the end of Pliocene. Overall changes in their distribution can be explained by climatic effects. On the contrary, three genera endemic to Japan (Sciadopitys, Cryptomeria, and Thujopsis) followed clearly different trends from the others. Cryptomeria and Thujopsis were especially adapted to cooler‐temperate climate and they retained their habitat areas in the northern part of Japan. During the late Miocene–Pliocene, the islands connected with the Eurasian continent again, which probably acted as a corridor for warm‐adapted genera to disperse southwest. Current data suggest that ecological requirements of each genus might be essential to determine whether they could survive on the Japanese Islands.
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日本和韩国亚洲针叶树特有属的渐新世-新近世化石史
利用日本列岛和朝鲜半岛湿润温带森林的化石资料,分析了东亚特有的10种针叶树属的时空变化,以阐明其植物地理历史,并了解日本列岛灭绝的针叶树属与幸存的针叶树属之间的差异。除Thujopsis外,所有这些属自古近纪以来就存在于该地区,并在中新世早期中期与大陆分离后留在日本岛屿上。当地灭绝的6个属的化石代表比它们的现代亲戚更能适应更广泛的气候条件。自中新世晚期以来,水杉、水杉和台湾杉的分布开始发生变化,可能是通过生境划分引起的。在中新世中期,油杉、假松林和杉木似乎向更温暖的环境扩展了它们的栖息地,然后在上新世末期被限制在更温暖的森林植被中。它们分布的总体变化可以用气候影响来解释。相反,日本特有的3个属(Sciadopitys、Cryptomeria和Thujopsis)的趋势与其他属明显不同。柳杉和叶青树特别适应寒温带气候,它们在日本北部保留了栖息地。中新世晚期至上新世,这些岛屿再次与欧亚大陆相连,这可能是温暖适应属向西南扩散的走廊。目前的数据表明,每个属的生态需求可能是决定它们是否能在日本群岛生存的关键。
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