Neotropical seasonally dry forests and Quaternary vegetation changes. Pennington, T., Prado, D. E., & Pendry, C. A. Journal of Biogeography, 27(2):261--273, March, 2000.
Neotropical seasonally dry forests and Quaternary vegetation changes [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Seasonally dry tropical forests have been largely ignored in discussions of vegetation changes during the Quaternary. We distinguish dry forests, which are essentially tree-dominated ecosystems, from open savannas that have a xeromorphic fire-tolerant, grass layer and grow on dystrophic, acid soils. Seasonally dry tropical forests grow on fertile soils, usually have a closed canopy, have woody floras dominated by the Leguminosae and Bignoniaceae and a sparse ground flora with few grasses. They occur in disjunct areas throughout the Neotropics. The Chaco forests of central South America experience regular annual frosts, and are considered a subtropical extension of temperate vegetation formations. At least 104 plant species from a wide range of families are each found in two or more of the isolated areas of seasonally dry tropical forest scattered across the Neotropics, and these repeated patterns of distribution suggest a more widespread expanse of this vegetation, presumably in drier and cooler periods of the Pleistocene. We propose a new vegetation model for some areas of the Ice-Age Amazon: a type of seasonally dry tropical forest, with rain forest and montane taxa largely confined to gallery forest. This model is consistent with the distributions of contemporary seasonally dry tropical forest species in Amazonia and existing palynological data. The hypothesis of vicariance of a wider historical area of seasonally dry tropical forests could be tested using a cladistic biogeographic approach focusing on plant genera that have species showing high levels of endemicity in the different areas of these forests.
@article{pennington_neotropical_2000,
	title = {Neotropical seasonally dry forests and {Quaternary} vegetation changes},
	volume = {27},
	issn = {1365-2699},
	url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1365-2699.2000.00397.x/abstract},
	doi = {10.1046/j.1365-2699.2000.00397.x},
	abstract = {Seasonally dry tropical forests have been largely ignored in discussions of vegetation changes during the Quaternary. We distinguish dry forests, which are essentially tree-dominated ecosystems, from open savannas that have a xeromorphic fire-tolerant, grass layer and grow on dystrophic, acid soils. Seasonally dry tropical forests grow on fertile soils, usually have a closed canopy, have woody floras dominated by the Leguminosae and Bignoniaceae and a sparse ground flora with few grasses. They occur in disjunct areas throughout the Neotropics. The Chaco forests of central South America experience regular annual frosts, and are considered a subtropical extension of temperate vegetation formations. At least 104 plant species from a wide range of families are each found in two or more of the isolated areas of seasonally dry tropical forest scattered across the Neotropics, and these repeated patterns of distribution suggest a more widespread expanse of this vegetation, presumably in drier and cooler periods of the Pleistocene. We propose a new vegetation model for some areas of the Ice-Age Amazon: a type of seasonally dry tropical forest, with rain forest and montane taxa largely confined to gallery forest. This model is consistent with the distributions of contemporary seasonally dry tropical forest species in Amazonia and existing palynological data. The hypothesis of vicariance of a wider historical area of seasonally dry tropical forests could be tested using a cladistic biogeographic approach focusing on plant genera that have species showing high levels of endemicity in the different areas of these forests.},
	language = {en},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2018-02-19TZ},
	journal = {Journal of Biogeography},
	author = {Pennington, Toby and Prado, Darién E. and Pendry, Colin A.},
	month = mar,
	year = {2000},
	keywords = {Amazon, Pleistocene refugia, Seasonally dry tropical forests, cerrado, chaco, gallery forests, neotropics, plant distribution patterns, vicariance},
	pages = {261--273}
}

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