Journal of Systematics and Evolution

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  • 收稿日期:2025-03-17 接受日期:2025-06-25

Marked Ericales diversity in late Oligocene-Early Miocene palynofloras from northern Thailand suggests stratified mountain forests

Paranchai Malailkanok1, Friðgeir Grímsson2, Reinhard Zetter2, Paul J. Grote3, Thomas Denk4,*, Wongkot Phuphumirat1,*   

  1. 1Division of Health and Applied Sciences, Faculty of Science, Prince of Songkla University, Hatyai, Songkhla, 90110, Thailand
    2Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
    3Northeastern Research Institute of Petrified Wood and Mineral Resources, Nakhon Ratchasima Rajabhat University, Nakhon Ratchasima 30000, Thailand
    4Swedish Museum of Natural History, Department of Palaeobiology, Stockholm, Sweden

    *Corresponding authors
  • Received:2025-03-17 Accepted:2025-06-25
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by Prince of Songkla University, Thailand (project number SCI 6402006S) and the Swedish Research Council (grant number 2021-05849 to T.D.).

Abstract: Fossil Ericales pollen from late Oligocene to Early Miocene sediments of the Ban Pa Kha Subbasin, Li Basin, northern Thailand, were examined using the single-grain method. A total of 24 different ericalean pollen types belonging to Ebenaceae (Diospyros), Ericaceae (Cassiope, Vaccinium, and Rhododendron), Pentaphylacaceae (Adinandra), Sapotaceae, Styracaceae (Rehderodendron and Styrax), and Symplocaceae (Symplocos) were identified. All the fossil pollen, except that of Sapotaceae, represent families/genera that are described for the first time from the Cenozoic of Thailand. By considering present terrestrial biome occupancy, Köppen–Geiger climate profiles, and vertical distributions of potential modern analogues of the parent plants producing the fossil pollen, the phytosociological and paleoecological preferences of the fossil taxa were assessed. Our results demonstrate that modern analogues of most of the ericalean taxa have wide ecological and climatic amplitudes with a broad zone of convergence in warm and cold temperate humid or seasonally dry climates. Exceptions are Sapotaceae, which rarely occur outside lowland tropical forests, and Cassiope, which at present occurs at high elevations and, besides Rehderodendron, is one of two modern analogues absent from the modern flora of Thailand. Along with a review of phytosociological studies in montane forests of northern Thailand and neighboring regions, this suggests that the assemblage of dispersed ericalean pollen of the Ban Pa Kha Subbasin likely derives from more than one vegetation type and possibly from different vertical zones.

Key words: Forest vegetation, Koppen signatures, paleoenvironment, palynology, scanning electron microscopy, single-grain method, terrestrial biomes