Woody Plants - Evolution and Distribution Since the Tertiary: Proceedings of a Symposium Organized by Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher LEOPOLDINA in Halle/Saale, German Democratic Republic, October 9-11, 1986

Front Cover
Friedrich Ehrendorfer
Springer Science & Business Media, Nov 11, 2013 - Science - 329 pages
Paleobotany has enormously expanded the documentation of fossil plant groups, floras and vegetation types, supporting its conclusions by technically much improved analyses of microfossils (pollen) and anatomical details. An increasing quantity and quality of all these informations from the geosciences is available when we follow the history of the biosphere up to the present. Simultaneously, research from the biosciences on the morphology, ecology, distribution, systematics and evolution of extant vascular plants, and on the ecogeographical differentiation of the vegetation cover of our planet, has made enormous progress. Thus, a synthetic geo- and bioscientific approach becomes more and more feasible and urgent for further advances in the many problems of common concern. A symposium organized by the "Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher LEOPOLDINA", attractive to paleo- and neobotanists, stimulated the discussion between specialists of the two disciplines. The main results of the symposium are now presented in this volume: Sixteen international contributions outline the current knowledge about the historical differentiation and evolution of woody plant groups and forests, covering the whole biosphere. This survey, from the beginning of the Tertiary up to the present, is a first systhesis of relevant data from the geo- and biosciences
 

Contents

Introduction
2
History of floras and vegetation types
79
Paleobotanical evidences of the Tertiary history and origin of
93
History of the montane forests of the northern Andes 109
115
Phylogeny of woody plants
133
Paleobotanical evidence on the early radiation of nonmagnoliid
165
Aspects of evolutionary differentiation of the Hamamelidaceae
188
Paleobotanical studies in Fagaceae of the European
213
Early history of the Juglandaceae 231
251
The genus Buxus Buxaceae aspects of its differ
267
Chorology of the Euxinian and Hyrcanian element in the woody
305
Ecogeographical differentiation of the Submediterranean
315
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information