4.3 Article

Patterns of extinction and persistence of Arctotertiary flora in Iberia during the Quaternary

Journal

REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY
Volume 162, Issue 3, Pages 416-426

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2010.02.015

Keywords

Quaternary; Iberian Peninsula; extinction species; survival flora; fossil floras

Funding

  1. Paleodiversitas I [200602956/BOS]
  2. [CGL-200806005/BOS]

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The native or allochthonous nature of certain extant species of the Iberian Peninsula is a matter of some controversy given our lack of knowledge regarding the survival and extinction processes to which they have been subject. The aim of the present work is to provide a review of the current knowledge regarding these processes during the Quaternary. The Middle Pleistocene Transition was a period of noticeable disappearance of Arctotertiary taxa in the Iberian Peninsula, related to the alteration in glacial cyclicity and climate change, including an increase in the severity of glaciations, a reduction in the length of the interglacial periods, and increased dryness during the coldest times. It is difficult to maintain that human activities played any important part in the complete or near-complete disappearance of some taxa during the Quaternary. In the Late Pleistocene and Holocene, however, the extinction of Cedrus. Picea and Carpinus might be related to climate change, competition with other taxa, and anthropogenic disturbances. In contrast, the extreme reduction or even complete disappearance of Platanus or Syringa seems to be due to natural causes alone. The available geological, molecular and palaeobotanical data suggest that some Arctotertiary taxa persisted over long periods of time during the Quaternary in the Iberian Peninsula. Indeed, the fossil record of one important group of taxa. including Castanea, Ceratonia, Carpinus and Juglans, shows its continued presence throughout the Quaternary. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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