This paper reviews how and when African rainforest diversity arose, presenting evidence from both plant and animal studies. Preliminary investigations show that these African forests are an assemblage of species of varying age. Phylogenetic evidence, from both African rainforest angiosperms and vertebrates, suggest a Tertiary origin for the major lineages in some of these groups. In groups where savannah species are well represented and rainforest species are a minority, the latter appear to be relics of a Mid-Tertiary rainforest. By contrast, species that are primarily adapted to rainforest have arisen in the past 10 Myr with the main morphological innovations dating from the Late Miocene, and Quaternary speciation dominating in large, morphologically homogeneous groups. The small number of species-level phylogenies for African rainforest plants hinders a more incisive and detailed study into the historical assembly of these continental forests.
The American Proteaceae are outliers from the main centres of diversity of the
family in Australia and South Africa. There are about 83 species in eight
genera which all belong to the monophyletic subfamily Grevilleoideae. Three
genera, Embothrium, Oreocallis and
Lomatia, are placed in the tribe Embothrieae
(sensu Johnson and Briggs), four
Euplassa, Gevuina,
Panopsis and Roupala in the
Macadamieae and the single genus Orites in the Oriteae.
There are five genera endemic to America and three also have species in
Australia and New Guinea (Gevuina,
Lomatia and Orites). The
Proteaceae appear to have arrived in South America via two routes. The larger
genera Euplassa, Panopsis and
Roupala, which are all endemic to America and have a
general distribution in northern South America and south-eastern Brazil, are
derived from Gondwanaland before it separated from South America. The
remaining genera are distributed either in temperate South America or in the
high Andes and appear to have arrived more recently via the
Australia–Antarctica–South American connection. Three of these
genera have species in both regions. The centres of species diversity of
Euplassa, Panopsis and
Roupala fall outside hypothesised forest refugia,
indicating that they are not true rainforest species but species of seasonal
habitats like those achieved at higher altitudes where they are commonly
found.
Two genera,Panopsis and Roupala,
have reached Central America after the central American land bridge was formed
six million years ago. The exact relationship to genera on other continents is
still unclear and there is a need for a cladistic biogeographic analysis of
the group based on both morphological and molecular data.
Previous analyses of macromorphological and molecular data on the continental African species Begonia iucunda (Begoniaceae) suggest that it occupies an isolated phylogenetic position within a clade consisting otherwise of species in sections Cristasemen, Filicibegonia, Loasibegonia and Scutobegonia. Accordingly, the new monotypic section Chasmophila is here described. Its taxonomic position and relationship to other African sections are discussed and data on its distribution and ecology are presented.
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