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Evolutionary history of the Arctic flora

Biology

Evolutionary history of the Arctic flora

J. Zhang, X. Li, et al.

The Arctic tundra, a warming and young biome, reveals its unique angiosperm diversity through a study by Jun Zhang, Xiao-Qian Li, and colleagues. Discover how landscape and climate changes since the Late Miocene have driven the formation of Arctic flora, based on 32 clades and 3626 species analyzed over millennia of evolution.... show more
Abstract
The Arctic tundra is a relatively young and new type of biome and is especially sensitive to the impacts of global warming. However, little is known about how the Arctic flora was shaped over time. Here we investigate the origin and evolutionary dynamics of the Arctic flora by sampling 32 angiosperm clades that together encompass 3626 species. We show that dispersal into the Arctic and in situ diversification within the Arctic have similar trends through time, initiating at approximately 10–9 Ma, increasing sharply around 2.6 Ma, and peaking around 1.0–0.7 Ma. Additionally, we discover the existence of a long-term dispersal corridor between the Arctic and western North America. Our results suggest that the initiation and diversification of the Arctic flora might have been jointly driven by progressive landscape and climate changes and sea-level fluctuations since the early Late Miocene. These findings have important conservation implications given rapidly changing climate conditions in the Arctic.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 18, 2023
Authors
Jun Zhang, Xiao-Qian Li, Huan-Wen Peng, Lisi Hai, Andrey S. Erst, Florian Jabbour, Rosa del C. Ortiz, Fu-Cai Xia, Pamela S. Soltis, Douglas E. Soltis, Wei Wang
Tags
Arctic tundra
angiosperms
evolutionary dynamics
climate change
diversification
flora
conservation
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