Abstract

Effects of climatic factors on the forest plant distribution were examined in Hokkaido Island, northern Japan, where boreal and temperate plants frequently co-occur, and the relationship of floral make-up with phytogeography and life form was analysed. From the climatic preference of tree species consisting of mixed forest, the co-occurrence of boreal and temperate plants was found over a wider thermal range in regions of little rainfall. However, co-occurrence in a certain forest site was more notable in the understory than in the crown. A particular case of this involves southern evergreen shrubs and herbs in a boreal coniferous forest. Another is the presence of northern summergreen herbs in a temperate hardwood forest. It is speculated that the co-occurrence dates back at least to the late Quaternary, when a decrease in temperature associated with the glacial period forced understory plants to adapt their life form or leaf habit to snowcover and the light conditions of interior forests. Recent geographical evidence suggests that the island has been isolated from the southern island for at least 70000 years. Thus, the postglacial re-expansion of southern species does not appear to be due to immigration but rather due to their expansion from refuges on the island such as Oshima Peninsula for snow-tolerant species and Hidaka District for snow-intolerant species.

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