Abstract Detail

Nº613/1587 - The decline of megathermal forests and fate of tropical forest lineages through the Cenozoic: Insights from palms
Format: ORAL
Authors
Jun Ying Lim1, Huasheng Huang2, Carina Hoorn3
Affiliations
1 Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 2 Department of Earth Sciences, University of Florence, Florence, Italy 3 Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Abstract
Tropical rain forests and mangroves are much smaller in extent today than in the early Cenozoic, primarily owing to global cooling and drying trends since the EoceneOligocene transition. The general reduction of these biomes is hypothesized to shape the diversity and biogeographical history of tropical plant clades. However, this has rarely been examined owing to a paucity of good fossil records of tropical taxa and the difficulty in assigning them to modern clades. Here, we evaluate the role that Cenozoic climate change might have played in shaping the diversity and biogeography of tropical plants through time, by examining the exquisite fossil pollen record for an iconic and ubiquitous component of tropical forests globally: the palms.