尼泊尔Arjun Khola地区Siwalik中新世植物区系及其古气候和植物地理意义

M. Prasad, S. Gautam, Nupur Bhowmik, Sanjeev Kumar, S. Singh
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引用次数: 2

摘要

对尼泊尔西部Arjun Khola地区Siwalik沉积物中新世收集的植物化石(叶片和果实印痕/压缩)进行了广泛的研究。结果表明,新疆存在着24科43属47种的被子植物分类群。其中34种为首次在研究区发现。在整个化石群中,相当多的化石是在本研究之前从其他以Siwalik地区为代表的地区描述的。大多数的叶和果标本都可归属于双科,但只有一种叶化石。已被分配到单子叶苋科。在该组合中最具代表性的科是豆科、皂荚科、龙心科和番荔枝科。早在古新世出现的豆科植物在中新世中期成为常绿森林的主要组成部分。大多数科通常以叶片形式代表,但Sindora Miq。和Butea Roxb。Willd交货。豆科植物和菊科植物以果实为代表。该组合中大部分化石叶片大小大至中等,叶尖滴落,叶缘完整,脉脉密度明显增大。上述特征表明喜马拉雅山麓中新世存在热带-亚热带植被类型。在已鉴定的标本中,大多数(超过69%)与现代分类群相似,分布在世界不同地理区域的热带常绿森林中,从Arjun Khola地区恢复的相似化石元素表明,在Siwalik沉积时期,该地区及其周围存在类似的森林类型。相比之下,现在该地区及其周围的植被与过去大不相同,因为它包含了通常构成干燥落叶林植物的元素。许多植物经由缅甸从东南亚迁移到印度,反之亦然。因此,在古近纪存在于东南亚的许多分类群,特别是双龙果科和豆科的成员,在新近纪出现在印度次大陆和尼泊尔。植物地理学数据还表明,在Siwalik沉积时期,喜马拉雅山脚上繁盛的植物群在现代可能向南和东南迁移,以寻找有利于繁茂生长的条件。从Arjun Khola地区的Siwalik前陆盆地恢复的所有物种的今天分布表明,它们今天在印度东北部、孟加拉国、缅甸和马来西亚的热带森林中被发现,那里存在有利的气候条件,目前在喜马拉雅山麓发现的分类群很少。因此,它可以推断,自中新世以来,植物组成发生了相当大的变化。最近生活亲缘(NLR)古气候构建方法表明,Arjun Khola地区在沉积物沉积期间为年平均气温(MAT) 22 ~ 28℃,年平均降水量(MAP) 2200 ~ 3200 mm的热带气候。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Miocene flora from the Siwalik of Arjun Khola area, Nepal and its palaeoclimatic and phytogeographic implications
An extensive study on the plant fossils (leaf and fruit impressions/compressions) collected from the Miocene of Siwalik sediments, Arjun Khola area, western Nepal has been carried out. It revealed the existence of a variety of angiosperm plant taxa represented by 43 genera and 47 species belonging to 24 families. Of these, 34 species are reported for the first time from the studied area. Quite a number of fossils out of the entire lot, were described much prior to the present study from other represented by the Siwalik localities. Most of the leaf and fruit specimens are assignable to families of dicots but a single fossil leaf Clinogyne Salisb. has been assigned to the monocot family Marantaceae. The families which are highly represented in the assemblage are Fabaceae, Sapindaceae, Dipterocarpaceae and Annonaceae. Fabaceae which appeared in Upper Paleocene became a major component of the evergreen forest during middle Miocene. A majority of the families are generally represented by leaf forms but Sindora Miq. and Butea Roxb. ex Willd. of the Fabaceae and Terminalia L. of the Combretaceae are represented by fruits. Most of the fossil leaves in the assemblage showed large to medium size with drip tips, entire margins and apparent greater venation density. All the above characters collectively indicated the existence of tropical to sub–tropical type of vegetation during the Miocene all along the Himalayan foot hills of Nepal. Out of the identified specimens, the majority (more than 69%) resembled modern taxa, distributed in the tropical evergreen forests of different geographical regions of the world and recovery of similar looking fossil elements from the Arjun Khola area, indicated existence of similar forest types in and around the area at the time of Siwalik sedimentation. In contrast, the present day vegetation in and around the area is quite different from the past as it includes elements that generally constitute plants of dry deciduous forests. A number of plants migrated from south–east Asia to India via Myanmar and vice–versa. Consequently, many taxa, especially members of Dipterocarpaceae and Fabaceae, existing in south–east Asia in the Paleogene appeared on the Indian subcontinent and Nepal in the Neogene. Phytogeographical data also suggests that taxa flourishing in the Himalayan foot–hills during Siwalik sedimentation have migrated elsewhere in modern times possibly towards south and southeast in search of favourable conditions for luxuriant growth.Present day distribution of all the recovered species from the Siwalik Foreland Basins of Arjun Khola area shows that they are found today in the tropical forests of North–east India, Bangladesh, Myanmar and Malaysia where favourable climatic conditions exist and only little amount of taxa are found to grow presently in the Himalayan foothills. Thus, it may infer that a fair change in floral composition has taken since the Miocene. The nearest living relative (NLR) method of palaeoclimate construction suggests that the Arjun Khola area enjoyed a tropical climate having Mean Annual Temperature (MAT) 22–28ºC and Mean Annual Precipitation (MAP) 2200–3200 mm during the deposition of the sediments.
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