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Evolution of Amazonian biodiversity: A review

Authors :
Juan M. GUAYASAMIN
Camila C. RIBAS
Ana C. CARNAVAL
Juan D. CARRILLO
Carina HOORN
Lúcia G. LOHMANN
Douglas RIFF
Carmen ULLOA ULLOA
James S. ALBERT
Source :
Acta Amazonica, Vol 54, Iss spe1 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, 2024.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Amazonia (defined herein as the Amazon basin) is home to the greatest concentration of biodiversity on Earth, providing unique genetic resources and ecological functions that contribute to ecosystem services globally. The lengthy and complex evolutionary history of this region has produced heterogeneous landscapes and riverscapes at multiple scales, altered the geographic and genetic connections among populations, and impacted rates of adaptation, speciation, and extinction. In turn, ecologically diverse Amazonian biotas promoted further diversification, species coexistence, and coevolution, with biodiversity accumulating over tens of millions of years. Important events in Amazonian history included: (i) late Cretaceous and early Paleogene origin of major rainforest plant and animal groups; (ii) Eocene-Oligocene global cooling with rainforests contracting to tropical latitudes separating Atlantic coastal and Amazonian rainforests; (iii) Miocene uplift of central and northern Andes that separated Pacific coastal and Amazonian rainforests, spurred formation of mega-wetlands in the western Amazon, and contributed to the origin of the modern transcontinental Amazon River; (iv) late Neogene formation of the Panamanian Isthmus that facilitated the Great American Biotic Interchange; (v) Pleistocene climate oscillations followed by late Pleistocene-Holocene human colonization and megafaunal extinctions; and (vi) modern era of widespread anthropogenic deforestation, defaunation, and ecological transformations of regional landscapes and global climates. Amazonian conservation requires decade-scale investments into biodiversity documentation and monitoring to leverage existing scientific capacity, and strategic habitat planning to allow continuity of evolutionary and ecological processes now and into the future.

Details

Language :
English, Spanish; Castilian, Portuguese
ISSN :
00445967 and 18094392
Volume :
54
Issue :
spe1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Acta Amazonica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4e480bd57c144ec8b52fc8afd3b5e54
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/1809-4392202103601