4.5 Article

Patterns of rain forest plant endemism in subtropical Australia relate to stable mesic refugia and species dispersal limitations

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages 222-238

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12219

Keywords

Adaptation; biogeography; centres of endemism; climate change; conservation; Eastern Australia; refugia; rain forest; seed dispersal; subtropical rain forest

Funding

  1. National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility grant
  2. South East Queensland Climate Adaptation Research Initiative
  3. CSIRO Climate Adaptation National Research Flagship
  4. Griffith Universit
  5. University of the Sunshine Coast
  6. University of Queensland

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Aim Our aims were to identify centres of endemism and to infer whether these areas have functioned as refugia for subtropical rain forest plants through historical climate fluctuations. Location Subtropical eastern Australia (23-33 degrees S; 145-155 degrees E). Methods We collated 25,000 records of 179 endemic rain forest plants to identify geographical areas with unusually high concentrations of endemic taxa and range-restricted endemics. We then tested whether centres of endemism coincide with other features indicating refugia, including habitat stability over 120,000 years, and we related dispersal patterns to past habitat stability using seed weight as a surrogate for dispersal ability of endemic plant taxa. Results We identified five main centres of endemism. Historical stability and other processes affecting diversity, including current rainfall, rain forest area, and topographic complexity, explained 58% of variation in plant-weighted endemism. Taxa with poor dispersal ability were concentrated in the areas that were most stable historically. Main conclusions Several lines of evidence suggest that centres of endemism have functioned as important refugia for subtropical rain forest taxa through historical climate fluctuations. The highest concentrations of range-restricted endemic species occur in locations that are predicted to have maintained stable rain forest habitat over at least the past 120,000 years. This association was independent from other factors that were expected to promote diversity (i.e. rain forest area and current environmental suitability). These locations have disproportionately high concentrations of species with poor dispersal ability (large-seeded species).

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