INVESTIGADORES
OLIVERO Eduardo Bernardo
artículos
Título:
When flowering plants ruled Antarctica: evidence from Cretaceous pollen grains
Autor/es:
BARREDA, VIVIANA D.; PALAZZESI, LUIS; OLIVERO, EDUARDO B.
Revista:
NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2019
ISSN:
0028-646X
Resumen:
-The replacement of seed-free plants and gymnosperms by flowering plants during the Cretaceous is one of the most important biotic events in the evolution of life. However, the magnitude of this global turnover remains largely unknown.-Here we present sampling-standardized diversity estimates from a high resolutionpalynological record of the Late Cretaceous (85-66 Ma) from Antarctica, in the context of the past climatic events.-Our fossil evidence reveals the occurrence of a rich Campanian flora peaking at ~80 Myr, with angiosperms as the most diverse group of plants for the first time in Antarctica. This peak of diversity was followed by a period of a stepwise deterioration; 60% of ferns and 40% of gymnosperms became locally extinct from the early/mid Campanian to the late Maastrichtian. Although angiosperms also faced several extinctions?25% became extinct?they were far less affected than non-angiosperms.-The onset of deterioration of the greenhouse conditions at the end of the Cretaceous?low CO2 and global cooling trends?would have led to our observed pattern of change. Overall, our study reveals the beginning of a profound floristic turnover in the highest southern latitudes that predates the major extinction event of the end of the Cretaceous by 15 Myr.