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1.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 142: 106645, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31610230

ABSTRACT

The Cape flora is compositionally biased, being dominated by a few fynbos clades (such as Iridaceae, Ericaceae, Proteaceae and Restionaceae) that make up major part of the distinct heathland vegetation in the Cape Floristic Region. Uncertainty exists concerning what excluded the subtropical to tropical palm-dominated woodland/forest vegetation that was the dominant component in the CFR in the Paleocene and allowed the fynbos clades, which are largely derived from outside Africa, to establish and radiate. Two filters have been proposed. The first postulates that the establishment of the Mediterranean climate driven by the late Miocene initiation of the cold-water Benguela Upwelling System (BUS) eliminated the African lineages and allowed the establishment and radiation of sclerophyllous plant clades ("the Mediterranean climate model", MCM). Alternatively, the "oligotrophic soils model" (OSM) postulates that the oligotrophic soils, gradually exhumed by post-Gondwanan Late Cretaceous - early Cenozoic erosion, acted as a filter excluding the African lineages. In this study, we re-calibrate the fynbos clade Phylica (Rhamnaceae), the genus initially used to test the MCM, using new fossil data to test if the crown age precedes the Late Miocene. Our results indicate that we cannot significantly reject a crown age of Phylica consistent with the MCM. We compare the MCM and OSM model for the Cape fynbos flora by compiling the crown ages of 22 fynbos clades. We show that crown ages are not clustered in time around the initiation of the BUS but, are dispersed throughout the Cenozoic. This suggests that oligotrophic soils, rather than summer drought, acted as a filter. Consequently, we argue that the fynbos clades radiated separately in expanding edaphically controlled heathland patches in the Cape mountains as sandstone exhumation after the Gondwanan break-up progressed.


Subject(s)
Rhamnaceae/classification , Climate , Fossils , Phylogeny , Soil , South Africa
2.
Biodivers Data J ; (2): e1076, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24891829

ABSTRACT

Crassignathadanaugirangensis sp. n. (Araneae: Symphytognathidae) was discovered during a tropical ecology field course held at the Danau Girang Field Centre in Sabah, Malaysia. A taxonomic description and accompanying ecological study were completed as course activities. To assess the ecology of this species, which belongs to the ground-web-building spider community, three habitat types were surveyed: riparian forest, recently inundated riverine forest, and oil palm plantation. Crassignathadanaugirangensis sp. n. is the most abundant ground-web-building spider species in riparian forest; it is rare or absent from the recently inundated forest and was not found in a nearby oil palm plantation. The availability of this taxonomic description may help facilitate the accumulation of data about this species and the role of inundated riverine forest in shaping invertebrate communities.

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