Late Paleocene fossils from the Cerrejón Formation, Colombia, are the earliest record of Neotropical rainforest
Top Cited Papers
- 3 November 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 106 (44) , 18627-18632
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0905130106
Abstract
Neotropical rainforests have a very poor fossil record, making hypotheses concerning their origins difficult to evaluate. Nevertheless, some of their most important characteristics can be preserved in the fossil record: high plant diversity, dominance by a distinctive combination of angiosperm families, a preponderance of plant species with large, smooth-margined leaves, and evidence for a high diversity of herbivorous insects. Here, we report on an ≈58-my-old flora from the Cerrejón Formation of Colombia (paleolatitude ≈5 °N) that is the earliest megafossil record of Neotropical rainforest. The flora has abundant, diverse palms and legumes and similar family composition to extant Neotropical rainforest. Three-quarters of the leaf types are large and entire-margined, indicating rainfall >2,500 mm/year and mean annual temperature >25 °C. Despite modern family composition and tropical paleoclimate, the diversity of fossil pollen and leaf samples is 60–80% that of comparable samples from extant and Quaternary Neotropical rainforest from similar climates. Insect feeding damage on Cerrejón fossil leaves, representing primary consumers, is abundant, but also of low diversity, and overwhelmingly made by generalist feeders rather than specialized herbivores. Cerrejón megafossils provide strong evidence that the same Neotropical rainforest families have characterized the biome since the Paleocene, maintaining their importance through climatic phases warmer and cooler than present. The low diversity of both plants and herbivorous insects in this Paleocene Neotropical rainforest may reflect an early stage in the diversification of the lineages that inhabit this biome, and/or a long recovery period from the terminal Cretaceous extinction.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Palms (Arecaceae) from a Paleocene rainforest of northern ColombiaAmerican Journal of Botany, 2009
- Tracing the impact of the Andean uplift on Neotropical plant evolutionProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009
- Giant boid snake from the Palaeocene neotropics reveals hotter past equatorial temperaturesNature, 2009
- Leaf margins and temperature in the North American flora: Recalibrating the paleoclimatic thermometerGlobal and Planetary Change, 2008
- The fossil pollen record of AraceaeÖsterreichische botanische Zeitschrift, 2006
- Continental-scale patterns of canopy tree composition and function across AmazoniaNature, 2006
- Cenozoic Plant Diversity in the NeotropicsScience, 2006
- South American palaeobotany and the origins of neotropical rainforestsPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2004
- A unified mathematical framework for the measurement of richness and evenness within and among multiple communitiesOikos, 2004
- Neogene and Quaternary development of the neotropical rain forest: the forest refugia hypothesis, and a literature overviewEarth-Science Reviews, 1998