Abstract

Abstract Old-world rainforests of the Palaeotropical Kingdom became established at different times in different regions with changing opportunities for plant dispersals in relation to Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic plate movements and climate change. The Palaeotropical and Neotropical kingdoms differentiated in the Late Cretaceous. Maastrichtian records of fossil Dipterocarpus pollen from Sudan show that canopy-forming dipterocarp genera evolved in Africa, and Dipterocarpoideae and other taxa dispersed to India with the Africa–India Floristic Interchange. As the Indian Plate drifted towards Asia in the Eocene, multiple lineages dispersed to SE Asia from about 48 Myr onwards, replacing a depauperate flora of East Asian affinity. Tectonic models for SE Asia are conflicting, and these differences strongly impact interpretations of the subsequent evolution of SE Asian rainforests. The lowland floras of the islands of Eastern Indonesia and Oceania originated due to dispersals mainly from SE Asia and became established after those areas rose above sea-level during the Neogene. Palaeotropical rainforests formed in equatorial Africa during the Campanian, in India in the late Maastrichtian to Paleocene, in SE Asia in the middle Eocene and in Oceania in the Miocene. The current megadiverse SE Asian rainforests are essentially descended from immigrant taxa.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call