New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
Effects of glacial climates on floristic distribution in New Zealand
1. A review of the evidence
P. WARDLE
Botany Division, DSIR
Private Bag, Christchurch, New Zealand
AbstractThe hypothesis that the Otira Glaciation
left a profound imprint on the present distribution of
flora and vegetation is reviewed, in relation to an
alternative hypothesis that patterns of endemism
and disjunction stem from tectonic events extending
back into the Tertiary. These hypotheses are not
mutually exclusive, and both accept that there are
"centres" of floristic richness in northern, central,
and southern New Zealand that are separated by
"gaps" showing relative poverty. Part 1 of the review
concludes that endemic and disjunct taxa are neither
especially associated with habitats that pre-date the
Otira Glaciation, nor characterised by evolutionary
antiquity. The Otira Glaciation is confirmed as a
time of extreme environmental stress, which is likely
to have caused more extinction in the "gaps". The
occurrence of cold-intolerant disjunct species in the
southern and Nelson-Marlborough "centres" is seen
not as evidence for glacial survival but as the result
of post-glacial long-distance hybridisation with
resident hardier species, followed by reconstitution
of the less hardy species (see Part 2).
The limited fossil evidence is consistent with
post-glacial spread of lowland podocarp-broadleaved
forest from the north of New Zealand, whereas the
distributions of cold-tolerant beeches and some other
species are consistent with spread from glacial refugia
in several parts of New Zealand, including southern
localities. The limits of the beech species against the
southern "gap" are at right angles to the present
environmental contours for geology, landforms,
altitude, temperature, cloud cover, precipitation,
and soils; and beeches are still spreading into this
gap, from both north and south.
Keywords"centres"; disjunction; dispersal;
endemism; "gaps"; glaciation; habitats; Holocene;
hybridisation; Nothofagus; refugia; variation
Received 10 February 1987; accepted 13 June 1988
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1988, Vol. 26: 541-555
0028-825X/88/2604-0541$2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1988
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1846K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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