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Antarctic flora
*** Shopping-Tip: Antarctic flora
The '''Antarctic flora''' is a distinct community of
Vascular plant vascular plants which evolved millions of years ago on the supercontinent of
Gondwana, and is now found on several separate areas of the
Southern Hemisphere, including southern
South America, southernmost
Africa,
New Zealand,
Australia and
Tasmania, and
New Caledonia. Based on the similarities in their flora,
botanist Ronald Good identified a separate Antarctic Floristic Kingdom (see
Floristic province), that included southern South America, New Zealand, and some southern island groups. Good identified Australia as its own floristic kingdom, and included New Guinea and New Caledonia in the Paleotropical floristic kingdom, because of the influx of tropical Eurasian flora that had mostly supplanted the Antarctic flora.
South America,
Africa,
India,
Australia,
New Zealand, and
Antarctica were all part of the Gondwana supercontinent, which started to break up in the early
Cretaceous period (135-65 million years ago). India was the first to break away, followed by Africa, and then New Zealand, which started to drift north. By the end of the Cretaceous, South America and Australia were still joined to Antarctica. Paleontologist Gilbert Brenner identified a distinct Southern Gondwana flora by the late
Cretaceous period, which resembles the New Zealand flora of today, in the cooler and humid southern hemisphere regions of Australia, southern South America, southern Africa, Antarctica, and New Zealand. A drier northern Gondwana flora had developed in northern South America and northern Africa.
Africa and India drifted north into the tropical latitudes, became hotter and drier, and ultimately connected with the Eurasian continent, and today the flora of Africa and India have few remnants of the Antarctic flora. Australia drifted north and became drier as well; the humid Antarctic flora retreated to the east coast and Tasmania, while the rest of Australia became dominated by ''
Acacia,
Eucalyptus'', and ''
Casuarinaceae Casuarina'', as well as xeric shrubs and grasses.
Humans arrived in Australia 50-60,000 years ago, and used fire to reshape the vegetation of the continent; as a result, the Antarctic flora (also known as the '''Rainforest flora''' in Australia) retreated to a few isolated areas, less than 2% of Australia's land area.
The
woody plants of the Antarctic flora include
conifers in the families
Podocarpaceae,
Araucariaceae and the subfamily Callitroideae of
Cupressaceae, and
angiosperms such as the families
Proteaceae,
Griseliniaceae,
Cunoniaceae and
Winteraceae, and genera like southern beech (''
Nothofagus'') and fuchsia (''
Fuchsia''). Many other families of flowering plants and ferns, including the tree fern ''
Dicksonia'', are characteristic of the Antarctic flora.
The continent of
Antarctica itself has been too cold and dry to support virtually any vascular plants for millions of years, and its flora presently consists of around 250
lichens, 100
mosses, 25-30
liverworts, around 700 terrestrial and aquatic
algal species. Two flowering plants (
Antarctic hair grass and
Antarctic pearlwort) are found on the northern and western parts of the
Antarctic Peninsula.
Category:Argentine flora
Category:Flora of Chile
Category:Flora of Antarctica *
*** Shopping-Tip: Antarctic flora