Multimillion-year climatic effects on palm species diversity in Africa

Ecology. 2013 Nov;94(11):2426-35. doi: 10.1890/12-1577.1.

Abstract

Past climatic changes have caused extinction, speciation, and range dynamics, but assessing the influence of past multimillion-year climatic imprints on present-day biodiversity patterns remains challenging. We analyzed a new continental-scale data set to examine the importance of paleoclimatic effects on current gradients in African palm richness patterns. Using climate reconstructions from the late Miocene (-10 mya), the Pliocene (-3 mya), and the Last Glacial Maximum (0.021 mya), we found that African palm diversity patterns exhibit pronounced historical legacies related to long-term climate change. Notably, pre-Pleistocene paleoprecipitation variables differentially affected current diversity patterns of palms grouped by contrasting habitat requirements. Accounting for present-day environment, rain forest palms exhibit greater species richness in localities where Pliocene precipitation was relatively high, whereas open-habitat palms show higher species richness in areas of relatively low precipitation during the Miocene Epoch. Our results demonstrate that diversity-climate relationships among African palm species include multimillion-year lagged dynamics, i.e., with historical legacies persisting across much longer time periods than commonly recognized.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Africa
  • Arecaceae / genetics*
  • Arecaceae / physiology*
  • Climate Change*
  • Demography
  • Genetic Variation*
  • Species Specificity
  • Time Factors