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Proteaceae leaf fossils: phylogeny, diversity, ecology and Austral distributions

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 03:50 authored by Carpenter, RJ
Foliar fossils of Proteaceae are reviewed, and useful specimens for interpreting evolution, and past and present distributions and environments are discussed. There are no definite Cretaceous occurrences. However, there is evidence of extant lineages dating from the Paleocene onwards, including tribe Persoonieae of subfamily Persoonioideae and each of the four tribes of subfamily Grevilleoideae. High diversity and abundance characterizes the Australian fossil record, including sclerophyllous and xeromorphic forms, but there is little evidence of the prominent extant subfamily Proteoideae. New Zealand had a much higher diversity of Proteaceae than at present, including Oligo-Miocene species of open vegetation. The South American leaf fossil record is not extensive. However, the fossil records of Embothrieae and Orites are consistent with the distributions of their extant relatives in South America and Australia being the result of vicariance. Overall, there is a need for more research on placing Proteaceae leaf fossils in a phylogenetic context.

History

Publication title

The Botanical Review

Volume

78

Pagination

261-287

ISSN

0006-8101

Department/School

School of Natural Sciences

Publisher

New York Botanical Garden

Place of publication

Publications Dept, Bronx, USA, Ny, 10458

Rights statement

Copyright 2012 The New York Botanical Garden

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in the environmental sciences

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