When you first spot a Helicia tree in the rainforest it seems fairly unimpressive. Generally not a canopy tree, generally a bit scraggly looking and unless they fortune a sunny break in the canopy they don’t flower or fruit too much. However, they have the most surprising evolutionary pattern. Helicia come from the plant family Proteaceae and yet they break many typical Proteaceae patterns. They are the among the most recently speciating genera in the family (a distinction usually reserved for Proteaceae in temperate or Mediterranean climates) and they have the highest speciation rate out of all 80+ genera. Helicia also have the largest geographic distribution of any Proteaceae genus and extend further into Asia than any other Proteaceae. So why have Helicia speciated so rapidly and recently and spread so far..... and what can it tell us about evolution, speciation and extinction? This is the central question of my research, and it has taken me to tree canopies in Papua New Guinea, Cape York and the Daintree in Queensland. Come and have a look at the work-in-progress that is my thesis and a few odd photos that I picked up along the way.
History
Publication title
School of Geography & Environmental Studies Conference Abstracts 2010
Editors
Kate Boden
Department/School
School of Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences
Publisher
School of Geography & Environmental Studies
Place of publication
Hobart Tasmania
Event title
School of Geography & Environmental Studies Conference, 2010
Event Venue
Sandy Bay
Date of Event (Start Date)
2010-06-28
Date of Event (End Date)
2010-06-28
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Other environmental management not elsewhere classified