Ice Age Refugia
Ice age refugia
The series of ice ages that occurred between 2.4 million and 10,000 years ago had a dramatic effect on the climate and the life forms in the tropics. During each glacial period the tropics became both cooler and drier, turning some areas of tropical rain forest into dry seasonal forest or savanna . For reasons associated with local topography , geography, and climate, some areas of forest escaped the dry periods, and acted as refuges (refugia) for forest biota. During subsequent interglacials, when humid conditions returned to the tropics, the forests expanded and were repopulated by plants and animals from the species-rich refugia.
Ice age refugia today correspond to present day areas of tropical forest that typically receive a high rainfall and often contain unusually large numbers of species , including a high proportion of endemic species . These species-rich refugia are surrounded by relatively species-poor areas of forest. Refugia are also centers of distribution for obligate forest species (such as the gorilla [Gorilla gorilla ]) with a present day narrow and disjunct distribution best explained by invoking past episodes of deforestation and reforestation. The location and extent of the forest refugia have been mapped in both Africa and South America. In the African rain forests there are three main centers of species richness and endemism recognized for mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, butterflies, freshwater crabs, and flowering plants. These centers are in Upper Guinea, Cameroon, and Gabon, and the eastern rim of the Zaire basin. In the Amazon Basin more than 20 refugia have been identified for different groups of animals and plants in Peru, Columbia, Venezuela, and Brazil.
The precise effect of the ice ages on biodiversity in tropical rain forests is currently a matter of debate. Some have argued that the repeated fluctuations between humid and arid phases created opportunities for the rapid evolution of certain forest organisms. Others have argued the opposite — that the climatic fluctuations resulted in a net loss of species diversity through an increase in the extinction rate. It has also been suggested that refugia owe their species richness not to past climate changes but to other underlying causes such as a favorable local climate, or soil .
The discovery of centers of high biodiversity and endemism within the tropical rain forest biome has profound implications for conservation biology .A "refuge rationale" has been proposed by conservationists, whereby ice age refugia are given high priority for preservation, since this would save the largest number of species, (including many unnamed, threatened, and endangered species ), from extinction.
Since refugia survived the past dry-climate phases, they have traditionally supplied the plants and animals for the restocking of the new-growth forests when wet conditions returned. Modern deforestation patterns, however, do not take into account forest history or biodiversity, and both forest refugia and more recent forests are being destroyed equally. For the first time in millions of years, future tropical forests which survive the present mass deforestation episode could have no species-rich centers from which they can be restocked.
See also Biotic community; Deciduous forest; Desertification; Ecosystem; Environment; Mass extinction
[Neil Cumberlidge Ph.D. ]
RESOURCES
BOOKS
Collins, Mark, ed. The Last Rain Forests. London: Mitchell Beazley Publishers, 1990.
Kingdon, Jonathan. Island Africa: The Evolution of Africa's Rare Animals and Plants. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989.
Sayer, Jeffrey A., et al., eds. The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1992.
Whitmore, T. C. An Introduction to Tropical Rain Forests. Oxford, England: Clarenden Press, 1990.
Wilson, E. O., ed. Biodiversity. Washington DC: National Academy Press, 1988.
OTHER
"Biological Diversification in the Tropics." Proceedings of the Fifth International Symposium of the Association for Tropical Biology, at Caracas, Venezuela, February 8-13, 1979, edited by Ghillean T. Prance. New York: Columbia University Press, 1982.