| Literature DB >> 35084986 |
Mahi Bansal1, Robert J Morley2,3, Shivaprakash K Nagaraju4, Suryendu Dutta5, Ashish Kumar Mishra1, Jeyakumar Selveraj1, Sumit Kumar5, Deepti Niyolia5, Sachin Medigeshi Harish6,7, Omer Babiker Abdelrahim8, Shaa Eldin Hasan8, Bramasamdura Rangana Ramesh9, Selvadurai Dayanandan6,7, Harsanti P Morley2, Peter S Ashton10, Vandana Prasad1.
Abstract
The evolution and diversification of ancient megathermal angiosperm lineages with Africa-India origins in Asian tropical forests is poorly understood because of the lack of reliable fossils. Our palaeobiogeographical analysis of pollen fossils from Africa and India combined with molecular data and fossil amber records suggest a tropical-African origin of Dipterocarpaceae during the mid-Cretaceous and its dispersal to India during the Late Maastrichtian and Paleocene, leading to range expansion of aseasonal dipterocarps on the Indian Plate. The India-Asia collision further facilitated the dispersal of dipterocarps from India to similar climatic zones in Southeast Asia, which supports their out-of-India migration. The dispersal pathway suggested for Dipterocarpaceae may provide a framework for an alternative biogeographic hypothesis for several megathermal angiosperm families that are presently widely distributed in Southeast Asia.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35084986 DOI: 10.1126/science.abk2177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728