[Taxacom] Juan Fernandez
John Grehan
jgrehan at sciencebuff.org
Wed Jun 1 21:42:48 CDT 2011
Tod - sorry to refer to you in the third person. I blame the late hour.
John
-----Original Message-----
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu [mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of John Grehan
Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2011 10:10 PM
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Juan Fernandez
Mike,
Thanks for the corroborating information as I was responding from off the cuff memory for the few examples that I could recall. I think your point about the problem of Australasian/Polynesian relationships provides a nice example of how biogeographic relationships do not necessarily match geographic proximity is something that dispersal oriented biogeographers tend to miss as it is something that is not predictable from chance dispersal theory.
Hopefully Tod will look into this Pacific relationships further if he has not already in his many years of work with Juan Fernandez. I look forward to hearing what he thinks about this and the other patterns.
John Grehan
-----Original Message-----
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu [mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Michael Heads
Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2011 5:38 PM
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Juan Fernandez
Hi John and Tod,
The most interesting aspect of the Juan Fernandez + Desventuradas area is not so much the endemic families Lactoridaceae and Thyrsopteridaceae, as these were formerly widespread. The real problem is the great similarity of the islands' biota with Australasia and Polynesia, and the great biotic break between the islands and adjacent mainland Chile. You cited angiosperms (you could add Mida, Santalum etc.), but many species of mosses and shorefishes are in Australasia and Juan Fernandez, but are not on South America. As far as I know, there has been no modern study of the break or the reason for it. A survey of invertebrates would be especially valuable.
In his discussion of Juan Fernandez, Moreira-Munoz (2011. Plant geography of Chile. Springer, Dordrecht) stressed the closer affinity with Australasia and the break with South America. Here's a quote from the conclusions (p. 169): 'islands might instead 'inherit' flora and fauna from prior volcanic islands in the same region" (Heads 2009, p 236). Heads (2009) exemplifies his proposal with Fitchia (Asteraceae) a small tree endemic to montane forests in SE Polynesia.
The genus has "presumably survived as a metapopulation on the volcanic islands and atolls which have come and gone around the Cook Islands/Tokelau and other localities in SE Polynesia. Its ancestors may date back to the origin of the Pacific plate and the Cretaceous plateaus" (Heads 2009, p 236). A similar history can be hypothesized for the small trees Robinsonia, Dendroseris, Yunquea, endemic to Juan Fernández, and Thamnoseris and Lycapsus endemic to the Desventuradas Islands.
These Asteraceous genera could be the remnants of a more "ancient Asteraceous world" related to the origins of the Pacific plate'.
Michael
Wellington, New Zealand.
My papers on biogeography are at: http://tiny.cc/RiUE0
--- On Thu, 2/6/11, John Grehan <jgrehan at sciencebuff.org> wrote:
From: John Grehan <jgrehan at sciencebuff.org>
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
To: "Taxacom" <taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
Received: Thursday, 2 June, 2011, 2:22 AM
Dear John,
As we have worked in the Juan Fernandez Islands for 30 years, I would be
interested to learn what the "biotic features" are that suggest the biota is
not completely "oceanic." Any thoughts on this?
Regards,
Tod
T. Stuessy
Vienna, Austria
Tod,
My observation did not stem from Head's comments on the Lactoridaceae. I have not studied Juan Fernandez in any particular detail and so my comment only reflected my impression that the islands were part of a broad geographic structuring of distributions across the Pacific - i.e. sets of distinctive distributional relationships rather than everything being everywhere or just related to the nearest South American mainland. In this respect the islands are biogeographically continental even though the individual location is 'oceanic' and that the biogeographic position of these islands indicates that they may be stratigraphically oceanic, but biogeographically their biota is not.
My characterization of biotic features that are non-oceanic refer to the geographic structure of biotas. If one treats taxa in isolation any one case can be explained away by dispersal - which one may chose if one wants to, but only by ignoring the patterns in general as being meaningless coincidence (which is what most biogeographers do in practice).
Examples for consideration would be Abrotanella. The population of A linearifolia on Juan Fernandez (Más Afuera Island). Presumably you are aware of this example discussed by Heads who pointed out that this might be taken as evidence of long-distance dispersal from mainland South America as the exposed rocks on Más Afuera are only 1-2.4 million years old and were never joined to the mainland. He points out that the stratigraphy is less important for biogeographic analysis than the general tectonic history of the while east Pacific. But that aside, he also notes that the Chile-Juan Fernandez disjunction has its parallel in the California-Chile disjunction of Blennosperma. And then one has to take into account the distribution of Abrotanella overall, with its trans-Pacific range and tectonic correlations in the Old World along with its vicariant relationships with the trans-Pacific Blennosperma-Ischnea clade. You are presumably aware of all of this. The point is that Juan Fernandez here falls into a broad non-oceanic pattern of biogeography.
Heads also referred to Darwiniothamnus of Galapagos and an endemic Erigon from Juan Fernandez (JF). The paper by Andrus et al (2009) argued that Erigeron fernandezianus was the sister group to E. rosulatus of Peru and Bolivia and this clade had an unresolved relationship with the Galapagos-northern Chile and Galapagos-Greater Antilles clade, and with Conyza bonariensis (which is so widespread as a weed that its native range in Central and South America may be lost?). So again there is a geographic structure to the Juan Fernandez location with respect to the broader biological affinities. If one just proposes chance dispersal to JF then one would have to appeal to the same origin for all the rest - despite their not occurring all over the place.
And as another example is the affinitiy between Euphrasia sect Paradoxae of JF and E. sect Novaezeelandiae rather than the adjacent South American E. sect Trifidae which is closer to E. sect Anagospermae of New Zealand.
There is also the postion of JF at the eastern limit of trans-Pacific Santalum and Coporsma, its position as part of the trans-Pacific Nerterea and Orobolus. I recall that there is a penguin nesting pattern a bit like that of the range of A linearifolia - but that's just from memory.
There are no doubt plenty of other examples of showing that JF is just one station on a broad set of localities that together point to their derivation from historical geographies in the Pacific (for which there is also considerable support argued in the geological literature). In this case it may be that the biogeography provides more evidence for the origins of JF biota than the visible stratigraphy. Whatever one may believe about the origin of JF biota, its biogeographic structure is real.
This might have made a good biogeography graduate exam question!
John Grehan
-----Original Message-----
From: Tod Stuessy [mailto:tod.stuessy at univie.ac.at]
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2011 12:19 PM
To: John Grehan
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
Dear John,
Sure. I wonder if this stems from Heads' comments about Lactoridaceae in
his Syst. Biol. article. If so, I think that this is not a good example of
the point he was trying to make. I have already chatted with him about it
in an e-mail.
Cheers,
Tod
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Grehan" <jgrehan at sciencebuff.org>
To: "Tod Stuessy" <tod.stuessy at univie.ac.at>
Cc: "Daniel J. Crawford" <dcrawfor at ku.edu>
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2011 2:32 PM
Subject: RE: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
Tod,
Since this stems from a public conversation on TAXACOM I will respond to
this question on the list if I may.
John
-----Original Message-----
From: Tod Stuessy [mailto:tod.stuessy at univie.ac.at]
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2011 2:59 AM
To: John Grehan
Cc: Daniel J. Crawford
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
Dear John,
As we have worked in the Juan Fernandez Islands for 30 years, I would be
interested to learn what the "biotic features" are that suggest the biota is
not completely "oceanic." Any thoughts on this?
Regards,
Tod
T. Stuessy
Vienna, Austria
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Grehan" <jgrehan at sciencebuff.org>
To: "Taxacom" <taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
Sent: Sunday, May 29, 2011 9:18 PM
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
Of course it assumes that what we think we know about the geological history
of an 'oceanic island' is true. And 'never connected to the mainland' is
tricky anyway. Galapagos may never have had a connection to the American
mainland at any one time, but it did sequentially through the island arc
that was at one time at the Galapagos, and at another time at the American
'mainland'
The biogeography of Juan Fernandez includes biotic features that belie the
simplistic notion that its biota is all 'oceanic'.
John Grehan
-----Original Message-----
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
[mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Richard Zander
Sent: Sunday, May 29, 2011 3:10 PM
To: Rob Smissen; taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
What passes for the null hypothesis of dispersalists is "if a species occurs
on an oceanic island never connected to the mainland, you can't use it as
informative in vicariance biogeography." Juan Fernandez is the usual
example.
I forget who formulated this, but it seems cogent.

* * * * * * * * * * * *
Richard H. Zander
Missouri Botanical Garden, PO Box 299, St. Louis, MO 63166-0299 USA� Web
sites: http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/resbot/�and
http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/bfna/bfnamenu.htm
Modern Evolutionary Systematics Web site:
http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/resbot/21EvSy.htm
-----Original Message-----
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
[mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Rob Smissen
Sent: Sunday, May 29, 2011 5:20 AM
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: [Taxacom] We're on a road to nowhere
Despite my sympathies with Jason, I'm with Michael and John on this one.
Dispersalism is biogeographic Nihilism.
"Everything is everywhere" is the dispersalists null hypothesis. Not good
for biogeography.
But very hard to disprove!
John Grehan has dispersed to Buffalo.
Oh well.
Glad I'm not a biogeographer.
Back to taxonomy.
cheers
Rob
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