Skip to main content

Biogeographic analysis of the woody plants of the Southern Appalachians: Implications for the origins of a regional flora.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Manos, PS; Meireles, JE
Published in: American journal of botany
May 2015

We investigated the origins of 252 Southern Appalachian woody species representing 158 clades to analyze larger patterns of biogeographic connectivity around the northern hemisphere. We tested biogeographic hypotheses regarding the timing of species disjunctions to eastern Asia and among areas of North America.We delimited species into biogeographically informative clades, compiled sister-area data, and generated graphic representations of area connections across clades. We calculated taxon diversity within clades and plotted divergence times.Of the total taxon diversity, 45% were distributed among 25 North American endemic clades. Sister taxa within eastern North America and eastern Asia were proportionally equal in frequency, accounting for over 50% of the sister-area connections. At increasing phylogenetic depth, connections to the Old World dominated. Divergence times for 65 clades with intercontinental disjunctions were continuous, whereas 11 intracontinental disjunctions to western North America and nine to eastern Mexico were temporally congruent.Over one third of the clades have likely undergone speciation within the region of eastern North America. The biogeographic pattern for the region is asymmetric, consisting of mostly mixed-aged, low-diversity clades connecting to the Old World, and a minority of New World clades. Divergence time data suggest that climate change in the Late Miocene to Early Pliocene generated disjunct patterns within North America. Continuous splitting times during the last 45 million years support the hypothesis that widespread distributions formed repeatedly during favorable periods, with serial cooling trends producing pseudocongruent area disjunctions between eastern North America and eastern Asia.

Duke Scholars

Altmetric Attention Stats
Dimensions Citation Stats

Published In

American journal of botany

DOI

EISSN

1537-2197

ISSN

1537-2197

Publication Date

May 2015

Volume

102

Issue

5

Start / End Page

780 / 804

Related Subject Headings

  • Trees
  • Tracheophyta
  • Plant Dispersal
  • Magnoliopsida
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Biological Evolution
  • Appalachian Region
  • 3108 Plant biology
  • 3104 Evolutionary biology
  • 3103 Ecology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Manos, P. S., & Meireles, J. E. (2015). Biogeographic analysis of the woody plants of the Southern Appalachians: Implications for the origins of a regional flora. American Journal of Botany, 102(5), 780–804. https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1400530
Manos, Paul S., and José Eduardo Meireles. “Biogeographic analysis of the woody plants of the Southern Appalachians: Implications for the origins of a regional flora.American Journal of Botany 102, no. 5 (May 2015): 780–804. https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1400530.
Manos, Paul S., and José Eduardo Meireles. “Biogeographic analysis of the woody plants of the Southern Appalachians: Implications for the origins of a regional flora.American Journal of Botany, vol. 102, no. 5, May 2015, pp. 780–804. Epmc, doi:10.3732/ajb.1400530.

Published In

American journal of botany

DOI

EISSN

1537-2197

ISSN

1537-2197

Publication Date

May 2015

Volume

102

Issue

5

Start / End Page

780 / 804

Related Subject Headings

  • Trees
  • Tracheophyta
  • Plant Dispersal
  • Magnoliopsida
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Biological Evolution
  • Appalachian Region
  • 3108 Plant biology
  • 3104 Evolutionary biology
  • 3103 Ecology