Authors
PC Tzedakis, Brent C Emerson, Godfrey M Hewitt
Publication date
2013/12/1
Source
Trends in ecology & evolution
Volume
28
Issue
12
Pages
696-704
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Here, we examine the evidence for tree refugia in northern Europe during the Late Pleniglacial (LPG) interval of maximum tree-range contraction. Our review highlights the often equivocal nature of genetic data and a tendency to overestimate potential tree distributions due to warm climate-model bias, and also reveals a convergence of macrofossil and pollen evidence. What emerges is the absence of temperate trees north of 45°N and a west–east (W–E) asymmetry in boreal tree distribution, with a treeless Western Europe north of 46°N, while restricted boreal populations persisted in Eastern Europe up to 49°N, and higher latitudes east of the Fennoscandian ice-sheet. These results have implications for current thinking on European genetic diversity patterns, species migration capacity, and conservation strategies.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PC Tzedakis, BC Emerson, GM Hewitt - Trends in ecology & evolution, 2013