Taxonomic turnover and abundance in Cretaceous to Tertiary wood floras of Antarctica: implications for changes in forest ecology
Publication date
2004
Authors
Cantrill, David J.
Poole, I.J.
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Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2004
Abstract
Based on the temporal distribution, abundance, and taxonomic composition of wood floras, four phases of vegetation
development are recognized through the Cretaceous to Early Tertiary of the Antarctic Peninsula: (1) Aptian to Albian
communities dominated by podocarpaceous, araucarian, and minor taxodiaceous/cupressaceous conifers with rare extinct
gymnosperms (Sahnioxylon). (2) Progressive replacement of these communities in ?Cenomanian to Santonian times by
angiosperms, most without modern analogues. (3) Increasing dominance of angiosperms becoming important both in terms of
diversity and abundance towards the mid-Late Cretaceous. (4) Modernization of the flora during the Campanian to
Maastrichtian with the extinction of earlier forms, appearance of the Nothofagaceae and diversification of associated elements.
These patterns broadly follow trends seen in the leaf and palynological record but with some important differences.
During the Cretaceous, conifer composition undergoes a change whereby Phyllocladoxylon-type woods increase relative to
the older Podocarpoxylon forms. During the Paleocene to Eocene period, a marked extinction in wood types occurs
associated with an increase in the abundance of nothofagaceous wood. Detailed examination of wood abundance and
distributions from sections within Maastrichtian and Paleocene formations points to strong environmental control on
taxonomic compositions. Similar differences are encountered when comparing coeval floras from different geographic regions
and palaeoenvironments.
Keywords
Antarctica, Cretaceous, Tertiary, fossil wood, angiosperm, conifer