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IUFRO Tree Biotechnology Conference 2011: From Genomes to Integration and Delivery
Tracing the history of South-American neotropical savannas and seasonally dry forests evidences from comparative phylogeography
Rosane Collevatti ; Suelen Rabelo ; Joao Nabout ; Jose Diniz-Filho
Others  :  http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1753-6561-5-S7-I3.pdf
PID  :  17137
来源: CEUR
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【 摘 要 】

The Neotropical Seasonally Dry Forests (SDF) are treedominated ecosystems that occur in disjunct areas of fertile soils throughout the Neotropics. The hypothesis that the vicariance of a formerly continuous seasonal woodland formation, which may have reached its maximum extension during a dry-cool period 18,000–12,000 bp (the LGM), the Pleistocenic Arc Hypothesis, has been raised to explain the disjunct distribution [1]. Alternatively, based on the distribution of contemporary SDF species in Amazonia Forest and palynological data, Pennington [2] also proposed that SDF may have expanded into Amazonia Basin during the Pleistoce, with rain forest and montane taxa largely confined to gallery forest. In addition, a number of studies based on the fossil pollen record now available show that during the early Holocene period (until ca. 6000-5000 14C B. P.), the climate was drier in most of the South American savannas and distribution of savanna-like vegetation in Central and Southeast Brazil was more extensive in early compared with the late Holocene [3-5]. In southeastern Brazil, the current vegetation exist in the regiononly in the latest Holocene period (since 970 or 600 B. P. for some regions) under the current wet climatic conditions, with an annual dry season of about 4 months. Hence, the fossil record shows that savanna expansion in the Quaternary, especially in southeastern Brazil was characterized mainly by herbaceous and grass savanna which were favored by the drier and highly seasonal climate. It is possible that arboreal savanna taxa became restricted to sites with moist climatic conditions, which served as refugias. We are interested in test these hypotheses using the genus Tabebuia as model group. We have chosen five species based on the pattern of geographical distribution: T. aurea and T. ochracea, from savanna vegetation (cerrado sensu stricto), T. impetiginosa, T. roseo-alba from SDF, T. serratifolia, widely distributed in Mata Atlantica, SDF, riparian forests and Amazonia. Here, we present the results basedon the phylogeography of T. impetiginosa. [First Paragraph]

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