Global Biogeography and Diversification History of Palms

William J. Baker, Wolf L. Eiserhardt, W. Daniel Kissling, J.-C. Svenning, Thomas L.P. Couvreur

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Recent biogeographic and ecoinformatic studies of palms provide a global context for the spatio-temporal evolution of palms and the tropical rain forests that they inhabit. Palms display high rain forest niche conservatism, with >90% of species occurring in this biome. The global distribution of clades and species richness is highly structured, suggestive of complex, differentiated patterns of evolutionary drivers. Macroecological studies show that palm species richness is globally contingent on climatic variables typical of the humid tropics, while island palm floras are also influenced by area and habitat heterogeneity variables. Incorporation of phylogenetic evidence reveals strong imprints of in situ diversification in the Neotropics and on islands, of biotic interchange, and of forest loss in Africa. We inferred an origin for palms in the mid-Cretaceous of Laurasia, which is significant for our understanding of rain forests because fossil evidence for this biome prior to the Palaeocene is weak. Lineage diversification in palms has proceeded in a constant manner from 100 Ma at least until the Miocene, conforming to the museum model of diversification. Since the Miocene, diversification rates of species-rich lineages have increased, consistent with ecoinformatic evidence for the role of in situ radiations on islands and the Neotropics identified above. Species-level phylogenetic studies and ecoinformatic analyses of the impact of past climate change, geological processes and sea level change on palm diversity are now required to add essential detail to the broad global picture given here.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date2013
Publication statusPublished - 2013
EventInternational Conference on Comarative Biology of Monocotyledons: Monocots V - Fordham University & the New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, New York, United States
Duration: 7 Jul 201313 Jul 2013
Conference number: 5th

Conference

ConferenceInternational Conference on Comarative Biology of Monocotyledons
Number5th
LocationFordham University & the New York Botanical Garden, Bronx
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityNew York
Period07/07/201313/07/2013

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