[Taxacom] Long distance dispersal of Amborella's ancestors
Kenneth Kinman
kinman at hotmail.com
Tue Dec 11 11:26:33 CST 2018
Dear All,
Are such simple panbiogeographic explanations actually just simplistic? If there was a "global ancestor" of angiosperms that then split, where is the evidence? Surely some trace of this ancestor would have been discovered if it was global.
Seems to me that the real (and more important) question is where the Amborella ancestor lived before it arrived in New Caledonia in the mid-Cenozoic. Most likely somewhere in Australia where it later became extinct when its habitat dried up.
----------------------Ken
________________________________
In John's response (apparently from the Heads article):
"Yet the origin of Amborella can be explained simply if a global ancestor split into
a New Caledonia clade and its sister found in the
rest of the world. This was followed by invasion of
New Caledonia by the sister group. The persistence of
Amborella in New Caledonia through the Paleogene flooding
can be explained most simply by the same process of
metapopulation dynamics that has allowed survival in other
groups."
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On Tue, Dec 11, 2018 at 9:37 AM Kenneth Kinman <kinman at hotmail.com<mailto:kinman at hotmail.com>> wrote:
Dear All,
I was reading an interesting 2015 article on fruiting in Amborella of New Caledonia. It offers hypotheses about how fruits (or seeds) of this ancient angiosperm's ancestors probably arrived in New Caledonia by avian dispersal, but have now lost such dispersibility during evolution on the island. Here are two quotes from the paper followed by a weblink to the paper:
"Another hypothesis to explain the particular fruiting cycle of A. trichopoda might refer to one of the “insular syndromes” described by Sir Sherwin Carlquist: the loss of dispersibility in island plants (Chapter 11 in Carlquist 1974<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10265-015-0744-5#CR001>). The flora of oceanic islands must have arrived by long-distance dispersal, yet, during evolution on the island, some groups may have naturally lost dispersibility."
"The original dispersing bird species might no longer be present in New Caledonia as many extinctions/extirpations of bird species have been shown to have occurred in the last 4,000 years subsequently to the arrival of Melanesian settlers (Balouet and Olson 1989<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10265-015-0744-5#CR5>; Pascal et al. 2006<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10265-015-0744-5#CR35>). The hypothesis of a pre-human extinction of the avian disperser(s) of A. trichopoda, while not proven, also remains open."
Here's a weblink to the article:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10265-015-0744-5
------------------------------Ken Kinman
________________________________
From: Michael Heads <m.j.heads at gmail.com<mailto:m.j.heads at gmail.com>>
Sent: Monday, December 10, 2018 6:33 PM
To: Ken Kinman
Cc: Taxacom
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] New Caledonia as a classic lesson in dispersal
Hi Ken,
The problem with the Nattier paper is that the approach they used, long distance dispersal theory, didn't work; it did not
explain critical groups such as the New Caledonian endemic Amborella, sister to all other angiosperms. Dispersal theorists
concluded that the group remains ‘puzzlingly enigmatic’ (Grandcolas et al., 2008, p. 3312) and ‘paradoxically difficult to
interpret’ (Nattier et al., 2017, p. 6).
Michael
On Tue, Dec 11, 2018 at 3:09 AM Kenneth Kinman <kinman at hotmail.com<mailto:kinman at hotmail.com><mailto:kinman at hotmail.com<mailto:kinman at hotmail.com>>> wrote:
Dear All,
The paper by Nattier et al. (2017) is definitely worth reading. Here is a weblink to that article:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-02964-x
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