How to translate text using browser tools
11 May 2017 Biogeographic relationships between Macaronesia and the Americas
John R. Grehan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

A vicariance model is presented for the origin of Macaronesian endemics and their allopatric American relatives. Trans-Atlantic relationships are identified for 21 taxa in which an endemic Macaronesian clade either has a sister group in the New World or is part of a larger monophyletic group that includes representatives in the New World. Historical implications of this pattern are discussed in relation to current tectonic and geological models for the Central Atlantic and the Macaronesian Islands. The proposed vicariance model identifies a local origin for the Macaronesian endemics from ancestral distributions that already encompassed ancestral Macaronesia and parts of the New and Old World before formation of the Atlantic. The present-day existence of Macaronesian endemics is attributed to sequential colonisation of newly formed islands within the Atlantic from Mesozoic time.

© CSIRO 2016
John R. Grehan "Biogeographic relationships between Macaronesia and the Americas," Australian Systematic Botany 29(6), 447-472, (11 May 2017). https://doi.org/10.1071/SB16051
Received: 17 November 2016; Accepted: 1 March 2017; Published: 11 May 2017
KEYWORDS
allopatry
differentiation
dispersal
divergence
evolution
geology
island biogeography
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top