2007
DOI: 10.5194/cp-3-109-2007
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Predicting Pleistocene climate from vegetation in North America

Abstract: Abstract. Climates at the Last Glacial Maximum have been inferred from fossil pollen assemblages, but these inferred climates are colder for eastern North America than those produced by climate simulations. It has been suggested that low CO 2 levels could account for this discrepancy. In this study biogeographic evidence is used to test the CO 2 effect model. The recolonization of glaciated zones in eastern North America following the last ice age produced distinct biogeographic patterns. It has been assumed t… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Our analyses predicted extensive co-occurrence of all three Reticulitermes species in the mid-latitudes of the southern Appalachians (Figure 2; Figures S4 and S5). Based on paleoclimatic [59], biogeographic [60] and comparative phylogeographic [61] data, the southern Appalachians remained free from Pleistocene ice sheets and served as a major refuge for many species during glacial periods, consequently maintaining higher levels of biodiversity. Indeed, the present-day complexity of this mid-latitude region harbors many different niches, which could facilitate long-term coexistence of closely related species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our analyses predicted extensive co-occurrence of all three Reticulitermes species in the mid-latitudes of the southern Appalachians (Figure 2; Figures S4 and S5). Based on paleoclimatic [59], biogeographic [60] and comparative phylogeographic [61] data, the southern Appalachians remained free from Pleistocene ice sheets and served as a major refuge for many species during glacial periods, consequently maintaining higher levels of biodiversity. Indeed, the present-day complexity of this mid-latitude region harbors many different niches, which could facilitate long-term coexistence of closely related species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…11). One potential complication is that reduced atmospheric CO 2 concentrations during the LGM may have favoured spruce and other conifers over deciduous genera, thus creating a slight northern bias in modern analogues (Jackson et al, 2000;Loehle, 2007). Additionally, some of the Picea spp.…”
Section: Palaeoclimatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Great Lakes region of North America is home to many of these peripheral or disjunct populations, which colonized the region following the retreat of the last glacial maximum (Hewitt 2004;Ehlers and Gibbard 2008). Prior to this colonization, the Southern Appalachians provided potential glacial refugia for numerous species that now inhabit the Great Lakes region, although the numbers and locations of refugia, the recolonization routes, and hence the dispersal of genetic diversity into this region, are generally not well known (Austin et al 2002;Waldron 1993;Flannery 2003;Church et al 2003;Hewitt 2004;Loehle 2007). Genetic diversity of peripheral plant populations around the Great Lakes has been assessed in a small number of species, and in some cases was found to be low relative to core populations (Hamilton and Eckert 2007;Row et al 2011;Paul et al 2013), although this is not inevitable (Freeland et al 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%