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Biogeographic Implications Paleogene Links

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The importance of the early Paleogene North Atlantic Land Bridge (NALB) for intercontinental flora and fauna exchange has been underscored by many authors (e.g. McKenna 1983; Tiffney 1985, 2008). In his classic paper from 1985, Tiffney mentions plant genera that are shared between the early Miocene Brandon Lignite Flora of eastern North America and Paleogene and Neogene floras of western Eurasia to illustrate the importance of the NALB. Subsequently, the shared North American–European fossil record of numerous additional plant genera suggest the same migration route (reviewed in Manchester 1999; Manchester et al. 2009; Amentotaxus, Cedrelospermum, Cercidiphyllum, Corylopsis, Gordonia, Koelreuteria, Mastixia, Phellodendron, Platycarya, Tapiscia, Tilia and Toricellia). Most recently, Paleogene disjunctions involving the NALB have been suggested for Decodon (Grímsson et al. 2012), Castanopsis (Sadowski et al. 2018, 2020), Eotrigonobalanus (Denk et al. 2012), Mahonia (Güner and Denk 2012) and Spirematospermum (Fischer et al. 2009). Notably, most of these taxa have not been recorded in the Paleogene fossil record of the sub‐arctic northern North Atlantic region and Svalbard. Until now it was assumed that the NALB played a crucial role for inter‐continental plant and animal migration via Greenland and the Faroe Islands (the so‐called Thulean route; McKenna 1983), but fossils from Greenland and the Faroe Islands that proved such a link were absent. Palynological data now provide direct evidence for a number of genera with a Paleogene transatlantic distribution to have thrived on Greenland, suggesting that they actually migrated via the NALB. For instance, Quercus sect. Quercus/Lobatae has previously been known from the middle Eocene of Axel Heiberg Island (McIntyre 1991, pollen; McIver and Basinger 1999, foliage) and Baltic amber deposits (Crepet 1989; Sadowski et al. 2020); Grímsson et al. (2015) provided unambiguous evidence for the presence of this type of Quercus in the Eocene of Greenland. Similarly, Fagus has previously been known from the middle Eocene of Axel Heiberg Island (McIntyre 1991, pollen). Recently, Grímsson et al. (2015, 2016a) provided the first record of Fagus pollen for the late Palaeocene (Agatdalen) and middle Eocene of West Greenland (Hareø; incl. leaves), complementing the records from Axel Heiberg Island (McIntyre 1991; Denk and Grimm 2009b). However, in view of the lack of Fagus in Eocene sediments of western Eurasia, there is currently no evidence for a transatlantic migration of Fagus during the Palaeocene or Eocene (Denk and Grimm 2009b).

Among extinct lineages of Fagaceae, foliage and pollen of the genus Eotrigonobalanus are reported from Palaeocene and Eocene sediments of West Greenland (Grímsson et al. 2016a; Figures 5 and 6). Eotrigonobalanus had a wide distribution in Eurasia (Kvaček and Walther 1989; Hofmann et al. 2011) from the Palaeocene/Eocene onwards and extending until the Miocene (Kvaček and Walther 1989). Foliage traditionally assigned to Dryophyllum from Paleogene sediments of the North American Gulf Coastal Plain (Jones and Dilcher 1988) co‐occurs with pollen closely similar to Eotrigonobalanus (Denk et al. 2012). The fossils from Europe, North America and Greenland may all belong to the same extinct lineage that had a wide distribution across the sub‐arctic North Atlantic in the Paleogene. Another extinct genus with a transatlantic Paleogene distribution is Platanites (Boulter and Kvaček 1989, Isle of Mull; McIver and Basinger 1999, Canada). Another member of Platanaceae, Platanus subgenus Glandulosa, is represented with two species in the BIP floras. Boulter and Kvaček (1989) reported P. fraxinifolia (Johnson and Gilmore) Walther from the Palaeocene of Mull, whereas P. bella is known from the Palaeocene of Greenland (Koch 1963; Kvaček et al. 2001). This has interesting biogeographic implications, as P. fraxinifolia essentially is a Central European species. However, Boulter and Kvaček (1989) also speculated that the specimens from Mull could be conspecific with P. bella but because of the insufficient informative characters in the infructescences of the Mull material did not assign the specimens from Mull to P. bella.

In summary, these examples demonstrate a variety of possible migration routes during the Paleogene. Widespread taxa, such as the lineage comprising Eotrigonobalanus, might have migrated over the North Atlantic from both directions and migration from North America to Eurasia or vice versa may also have involved the Bering Land Bridge (see also, Tiffney and Manchester 2001). Taxa that migrated across the NALB either from the west or from the east are Cedrelospermum, Cercidiphyllum, Corylopsis, Mastixia, Platanites, Quercus and possibly Spirematospermum (Figure 6M and N) among others. A few taxa clearly have an earlier fossil record from North America and might have migrated to Europe from the west (Amentotaxus, Decodon, Koelreuteria, Mahonia and possibly Tilia). In rare cases, plant lineages may have reached Greenland but not crossed over to Europe or North America (Fagus is known from the Palaeocene of Greenland, the Eocene of North America, including Axel Heiberg Island, and Greenland, but has no Eocene fossil record in Europe). P. fraxinifolia may have been restricted to Europe and Scotland.

Biogeography in the Sub-Arctic

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