冈瓦纳人幸存谱系与东南亚人类世的高风险生物地理

R. Kooyman, S. Ivory, Adam J. Benfield, P. Wilf
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引用次数: 4

摘要

东南亚雨林地区极其复杂,生物种类繁多。化石表明,现在存在于亚洲的古南极雨林谱系(PARLs)在很长一段时间内追踪了生存和多样化所需的湿润环境。然而,未来气候变化对东南亚剩余雨林和parl的威胁还有待评估,以确定保护的优先事项。本文首先对东南亚岛屿群的木本属植物区系关系进行了量化,方法是对最近收集的生物区域物种资料进行分析。然后,我们评估了木质化石谱系对群落聚集的贡献以及岛屿群与环境梯度的关系。为了更好地了解化石谱系分布的气候约束和预测未来气候下的分布,我们使用了包括两种被子植物和两种裸子植物的木本活parl样本。使用广义线性模型来预测未来气候路径下假定二氧化碳排放不减少的潜在分布。植物区系分析强调了马来西亚常湿森林地区的岛屿群之间的相似性,而parl通常集中在这些地区。排序异常值代表更多的季节性地点。物种分布模型表明,古谱系的潜在未来分布受到降雨季节性增加和季节温度升高的限制,样例属之间存在显著差异。值得注意的是,潜在的分布往往映射到事实上无法到达的地区,在那里,森林砍伐和普遍存在的海洋扩散障碍是该地区的特征,将大大阻碍潜在的重新安置。这些现实严重威胁着东南亚的古保护价值和当代雨林群落聚集过程。
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Gondwanan survivor lineages and the high‐risk biogeography of Anthropocene Southeast Asia
The Southeast Asian rainforest region is extremely complex and biodiverse. Fossils have shown that paleo‐Antarctic rainforest lineages (PARLs) now extant in Asia tracked the ever‐wet conditions needed to survive and diversify through deep time. However, the threat of future climate change to the remaining rainforest and PARLs in Southeast Asia has yet to be evaluated to set conservation priorities. We first quantified the woody‐genus floristic relationships of Southeast Asian Island Groups by vetting and analyzing recent compilations of bioregional species data. We then evaluated the contributions to community assembly of woody fossil lineages and Island Group relationships to environmental gradients. To better understand climatic constraints of fossil lineage distributions and forecast distributions under projected future climate, we used exemplar living woody PARLs, including two angiosperms and two gymnosperms. Generalized linear models were used to project potential distributions under future climate pathways that assume no reduction in carbon dioxide emissions. The floristic analyses highlighted strong similarities among Island Groups in the ever‐wet forest areas of Malesia, where PARLs are often concentrated. Ordination outliers represented more seasonal locations. Species distribution models showed that potential future distributions of ancient lineages are constrained by increasing rainfall seasonality and higher seasonal temperatures, with significant differences among exemplar genera. Notably, potential distributions often mapped onto de facto inaccessible areas, where forest clearing and the ubiquitous marine dispersal barriers that characterize the region will drastically inhibit potential relocation. These realities gravely threaten paleo‐conservation values and contemporary rainforest community assembly processes in Southeast Asia.
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