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Relict (biology)

In biogeography and paleontology, a relict is a population or taxon of organisms that was more widespread or more diverse in the past. A relictual population is a population currently inhabiting a restricted area whose range was far wider during a previous geologic epoch. Similarly, a relictual taxon is a taxon (e.g. species or other lineage) which is the sole surviving representative of a formerly diverse group.[1]

Definition Edit

A relict (or relic) plant or animal is a taxon that persists as a remnant of what was once a diverse and widespread population. Relictualism occurs when a widespread habitat or range changes and a small area becomes cut off from the whole. A subset of the population is then confined to the available hospitable area, and survives there while the broader population either shrinks or evolves divergently. This phenomenon differs from endemism in that the range of the population was not always restricted to the local region. In other words, the species or group did not necessarily arise in that small area, but rather was stranded, or insularized, by changes over time. The agent of change could be anything from competition from other organisms, continental drift, or climate change such as an ice age.

When a relict is representative of taxa found in the fossil record, and yet is still living, such an organism is sometimes referred to as a living fossil. However, a relict need not be currently living. An evolutionary relict is any organism that was characteristic of the flora or fauna of one age and that persisted into a later age, with the later age being characterized by newly evolved flora or fauna significantly different from those that came before.

Examples Edit

 
The population of the Siberian columbine in the Central Siberian Plateau is considered a quaternary relict.[2]

A notable example is the thylacine of Tasmania, a relict marsupial carnivore that survived into modern times on an island, whereas the rest of its species on mainland Australia had gone extinct between 3000 and 2000 years ago.[3]

Another example is Omma, a genus of beetle with a fossil record extending back over 200 million years to the Late Triassic and found worldwide during the Jurassic and Cretaceous, now confined to a single living species in Australia. Another relict from the Triassic is Pholadomya, a common clam genus during the Mesozoic, now confined to a single rare species in the Caribbean.

An example from the fossil record would be a specimen of Nimravidae, an extinct branch of carnivores in the mammalian evolutionary tree, if said specimen came from Europe in the Miocene epoch. If that was the case, the specimen would represent, not the main population, but a last surviving remnant of the nimravid lineage. These carnivores were common and widespread in the previous epoch, the Oligocene, and disappeared when the climate changed and woodlands were replaced by savanna. They persisted in Europe in the last remaining forests as a relict of the Oligocene: a relict species in a relict habitat.[4]

An example of divergent evolution creating relicts is found in the shrews of the islands off the coast of Alaska, namely the Pribilof Island shrew and the St. Lawrence Island shrew. These species are apparently relicts of a time when the islands were connected to the mainland, and these species were once conspecific with a more widespread species, now the cinereus shrew, the three populations having diverged through speciation.[5]

In botany, an example of an ice age relict plant population is the Snowdon lily, notable as being precariously rare in Wales. The Welsh population is confined to the north-facing slopes of Snowdonia, where climatic conditions are apparently similar to ice age Europe. Some have expressed concern that the warming climate will cause the lily to die out in Great Britain.[6] Other populations of the same plant can be found in the Arctic and in the mountains of Europe and North America, where it is known as the common alplily.

While the extirpation of a geographically disjunct population of a relict species may be of regional conservation concern, outright extinction at the species level may occur in this century of rapid climate change if geographic range occupied by a relict species has already contracted to the degree that it is narrowly endemic. For this reason, the traditional conservation tool of translocation has recently been reframed as assisted migration of narrowly endemic, critically endangered species that are already (or soon expected) to experience climate change beyond their levels of tolerance.[7] Two examples of critically endangered relict species for which assisted migration projects are already underway are the western swamp tortoise of Australia and a subcanopy conifer tree in the United States called Florida Torreya.[8]

A well-studied botanical example of a relictual taxon is Ginkgo biloba, the last living representative of Ginkgoales that is restricted to China in the wild. Ginkgo trees had a diverse and widespread northern distribution during the Mesozoic, but are not known from the fossil record after the Pliocene other than G. biloba.[9][10]

The Saimaa ringed seal (Phoca hispida saimensis) is an endemic subspecies, a relict of last ice age that lives only in Finland in the landlocked and fragmented Saimaa freshwater lake complex.[11] Nowadays the population has less than 400 individuals, which poses a threat to its survival.[12]

Another example is the relict leopard frog once found throughout Nevada, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado, but now only found at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada and Arizona.

Relevance Edit

The concept of relictualism is useful in understanding the ecology and conservation status of populations that have become insularized, meaning confined to one small area or multiple small areas with no chance of movement between populations. Insularization makes a population vulnerable to forces that can lead to extinction, such as disease, inbreeding, habitat destruction, competition from introduced species, and global warming. Consider the case of the white-eyed river martin, a very localized species of bird found only in Southeast Asia, and extremely rare, if not already extinct. Its closest and only surviving living relative is the African river martin, also very localized in central Africa. These two species are the only known members of the subfamily Pseudochelidoninae, and their widely disjunct populations suggest they are relict populations of a more common and widespread ancestor. Known to science only since 1968, it seems to have disappeared.[13]

Studies have been done on relict populations in isolated mountain and valley habitats in western North America, where the basin and range topography creates areas that are insular in nature, such as forested mountains surrounded by inhospitable desert, called sky islands. Such situations can serve as refuges for certain Pleistocene relicts, such as Townsend's pocket gopher,[5] while at the same time creating barriers for biological dispersal. Studies have shown that such insular habitats have a tendency toward decreasing species richness. This observation has significant implications for conservation biology, because habitat fragmentation can also lead to the insularization of stranded populations.[3][14]

So-called "relics of cultivation"[15] are plant species that were grown in the past for various purposes (medicinal, food, dyes, etc.), but are no longer utilized. They are naturalized and can be found at archaeological sites.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Habel, Jan C.; Assmann, Thorsten; Schmitt, Thomas; Avise, John C. (2010). "Relict Species: From Past to Future". In Habel, Jan Christian; Assmann, Thorsten (eds.). Relict species: Phylogeography and Conservation Biology. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. 1–5. ISBN 9783540921608.
  2. ^ Ziman, Svetlana N.; Keener, Carl S. (1989). "Geographical Analysis of the Family Ranunculaceae". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. Missouri Botanical Garden. 76 (4): 1021. doi:10.2307/2399690. JSTOR 2399690.
  3. ^ a b Quammen, David (2004). The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in An Age of Extinctions. New York: Scribner. pp. 287–288, 436–447, 631. ISBN 978-0-684-82712-4.
  4. ^ Prothero, Donald R. (2006). After the Dinosaurs: The Age of Mammals. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. pp. 9, 132–134, 160, 174, 176, 198, 222–233. ISBN 978-0-253-34733-6.
  5. ^ a b Wilson, Don; Ruff, Sue (1999). The Smithsonian Book of North American Mammals. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 20, 27–30. ISBN 978-1-56098-845-8.
  6. ^ Brown, Paul (27 March 2003). "Global warming threatens Snowdonian plant". Guardian. London: Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  7. ^ Thomas, Chris D (May 2011). "Translocation of species, climate change, and the end of trying to recreate past ecological communities" (PDF). Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 26 (5): 216–221. doi:10.1016/j.tree.2011.02.006.
  8. ^ Dalrymple, Sarah (16 July 2021). "Why climate change is forcing conservationists to be more ambitious: by moving threatened species to pastures new". The Conversation. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  9. ^ Zhou, Zhiyan; Zheng, Shaolin (2003). "Palaeobiology: The missing link in Ginkgo evolution". Nature. 423 (6942): 821–2. Bibcode:2003Natur.423..821Z. doi:10.1038/423821a. PMID 12815417. S2CID 4342303.
  10. ^ Julie Jalalpour; Matt Malkin; Peter Poon; Liz Rehrmann; Jerry Yu (1997). "Ginkgoales: Fossil Record". University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved 3 June 2008.
  11. ^ Palo, J.U.; Hyvärinen, H.; Helle, E.; Mäkinen, H.S.; Väinölä, R. (March 2003). "Postglacial loss of microsatellite variation in the landlocked Lake Saimaa ringed seal". Conservation Genetics. 4 (2): 117–128. doi:10.1023/A:1023303109701. eISSN 1572-9737. ISSN 1566-0621. S2CID 25621332.
  12. ^ "Saimaa Ringed Seal". WWF Finland. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  13. ^ Turner, Angela K.; Rose, Chris (1989). Swallows & Martins. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. pp. 5, 34, 85–87. ISBN 978-0-395-51174-9.
  14. ^ Harris, Larry D. (1984). The Fragmented Forest: Island Biogeography Theory and the Preservation of Biotic Diversity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 71–92. ISBN 978-0-226-31763-2.
  15. ^ Celka Z., Drapikowska M. 2008. Relics of cultivation in Central Europe: Malva alcea L. as an example. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. Volume 17, Supplement 1, 251-255, doi:10.1007/s00334-008-0151-0

relict, biology, biogeography, paleontology, relict, population, taxon, organisms, that, more, widespread, more, diverse, past, relictual, population, population, currently, inhabiting, restricted, area, whose, range, wider, during, previous, geologic, epoch, . In biogeography and paleontology a relict is a population or taxon of organisms that was more widespread or more diverse in the past A relictual population is a population currently inhabiting a restricted area whose range was far wider during a previous geologic epoch Similarly a relictual taxon is a taxon e g species or other lineage which is the sole surviving representative of a formerly diverse group 1 Contents 1 Definition 2 Examples 3 Relevance 4 See also 5 ReferencesDefinition EditA relict or relic plant or animal is a taxon that persists as a remnant of what was once a diverse and widespread population Relictualism occurs when a widespread habitat or range changes and a small area becomes cut off from the whole A subset of the population is then confined to the available hospitable area and survives there while the broader population either shrinks or evolves divergently This phenomenon differs from endemism in that the range of the population was not always restricted to the local region In other words the species or group did not necessarily arise in that small area but rather was stranded or insularized by changes over time The agent of change could be anything from competition from other organisms continental drift or climate change such as an ice age When a relict is representative of taxa found in the fossil record and yet is still living such an organism is sometimes referred to as a living fossil However a relict need not be currently living An evolutionary relict is any organism that was characteristic of the flora or fauna of one age and that persisted into a later age with the later age being characterized by newly evolved flora or fauna significantly different from those that came before Examples Edit nbsp The population of the Siberian columbine in the Central Siberian Plateau is considered a quaternary relict 2 A notable example is the thylacine of Tasmania a relict marsupial carnivore that survived into modern times on an island whereas the rest of its species on mainland Australia had gone extinct between 3000 and 2000 years ago 3 Another example is Omma a genus of beetle with a fossil record extending back over 200 million years to the Late Triassic and found worldwide during the Jurassic and Cretaceous now confined to a single living species in Australia Another relict from the Triassic is Pholadomya a common clam genus during the Mesozoic now confined to a single rare species in the Caribbean An example from the fossil record would be a specimen of Nimravidae an extinct branch of carnivores in the mammalian evolutionary tree if said specimen came from Europe in the Miocene epoch If that was the case the specimen would represent not the main population but a last surviving remnant of the nimravid lineage These carnivores were common and widespread in the previous epoch the Oligocene and disappeared when the climate changed and woodlands were replaced by savanna They persisted in Europe in the last remaining forests as a relict of the Oligocene a relict species in a relict habitat 4 An example of divergent evolution creating relicts is found in the shrews of the islands off the coast of Alaska namely the Pribilof Island shrew and the St Lawrence Island shrew These species are apparently relicts of a time when the islands were connected to the mainland and these species were once conspecific with a more widespread species now the cinereus shrew the three populations having diverged through speciation 5 In botany an example of an ice age relict plant population is the Snowdon lily notable as being precariously rare in Wales The Welsh population is confined to the north facing slopes of Snowdonia where climatic conditions are apparently similar to ice age Europe Some have expressed concern that the warming climate will cause the lily to die out in Great Britain 6 Other populations of the same plant can be found in the Arctic and in the mountains of Europe and North America where it is known as the common alplily While the extirpation of a geographically disjunct population of a relict species may be of regional conservation concern outright extinction at the species level may occur in this century of rapid climate change if geographic range occupied by a relict species has already contracted to the degree that it is narrowly endemic For this reason the traditional conservation tool of translocation has recently been reframed as assisted migration of narrowly endemic critically endangered species that are already or soon expected to experience climate change beyond their levels of tolerance 7 Two examples of critically endangered relict species for which assisted migration projects are already underway are the western swamp tortoise of Australia and a subcanopy conifer tree in the United States called Florida Torreya 8 A well studied botanical example of a relictual taxon is Ginkgo biloba the last living representative of Ginkgoales that is restricted to China in the wild Ginkgo trees had a diverse and widespread northern distribution during the Mesozoic but are not known from the fossil record after the Pliocene other than G biloba 9 10 The Saimaa ringed seal Phoca hispida saimensis is an endemic subspecies a relict of last ice age that lives only in Finland in the landlocked and fragmented Saimaa freshwater lake complex 11 Nowadays the population has less than 400 individuals which poses a threat to its survival 12 Another example is the relict leopard frog once found throughout Nevada Arizona Utah and Colorado but now only found at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada and Arizona Relevance EditThe concept of relictualism is useful in understanding the ecology and conservation status of populations that have become insularized meaning confined to one small area or multiple small areas with no chance of movement between populations Insularization makes a population vulnerable to forces that can lead to extinction such as disease inbreeding habitat destruction competition from introduced species and global warming Consider the case of the white eyed river martin a very localized species of bird found only in Southeast Asia and extremely rare if not already extinct Its closest and only surviving living relative is the African river martin also very localized in central Africa These two species are the only known members of the subfamily Pseudochelidoninae and their widely disjunct populations suggest they are relict populations of a more common and widespread ancestor Known to science only since 1968 it seems to have disappeared 13 Studies have been done on relict populations in isolated mountain and valley habitats in western North America where the basin and range topography creates areas that are insular in nature such as forested mountains surrounded by inhospitable desert called sky islands Such situations can serve as refuges for certain Pleistocene relicts such as Townsend s pocket gopher 5 while at the same time creating barriers for biological dispersal Studies have shown that such insular habitats have a tendency toward decreasing species richness This observation has significant implications for conservation biology because habitat fragmentation can also lead to the insularization of stranded populations 3 14 So called relics of cultivation 15 are plant species that were grown in the past for various purposes medicinal food dyes etc but are no longer utilized They are naturalized and can be found at archaeological sites See also EditLiving fossilReferences Edit Habel Jan C Assmann Thorsten Schmitt Thomas Avise John C 2010 Relict Species From Past to Future In Habel Jan Christian Assmann Thorsten eds Relict species Phylogeography and Conservation Biology Berlin Springer Verlag pp 1 5 ISBN 9783540921608 Ziman Svetlana N Keener Carl S 1989 Geographical Analysis of the Family Ranunculaceae Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden Missouri Botanical Garden 76 4 1021 doi 10 2307 2399690 JSTOR 2399690 a b Quammen David 2004 The Song of the Dodo Island Biogeography in An Age of Extinctions New York Scribner pp 287 288 436 447 631 ISBN 978 0 684 82712 4 Prothero Donald R 2006 After the Dinosaurs The Age of Mammals Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 9 132 134 160 174 176 198 222 233 ISBN 978 0 253 34733 6 a b Wilson Don Ruff Sue 1999 The Smithsonian Book of North American Mammals Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press pp 20 27 30 ISBN 978 1 56098 845 8 Brown Paul 27 March 2003 Global warming threatens Snowdonian plant Guardian London Guardian Unlimited Retrieved 9 April 2011 Thomas Chris D May 2011 Translocation of species climate change and the end of trying to recreate past ecological communities PDF Trends in Ecology and Evolution 26 5 216 221 doi 10 1016 j tree 2011 02 006 Dalrymple Sarah 16 July 2021 Why climate change is forcing conservationists to be more ambitious by moving threatened species to pastures new The Conversation Retrieved 26 July 2022 Zhou Zhiyan Zheng Shaolin 2003 Palaeobiology The missing link in Ginkgo evolution Nature 423 6942 821 2 Bibcode 2003Natur 423 821Z doi 10 1038 423821a PMID 12815417 S2CID 4342303 Julie Jalalpour Matt Malkin Peter Poon Liz Rehrmann Jerry Yu 1997 Ginkgoales Fossil Record University of California Berkeley Retrieved 3 June 2008 Palo J U Hyvarinen H Helle E Makinen H S Vainola R March 2003 Postglacial loss of microsatellite variation in the landlocked Lake Saimaa ringed seal Conservation Genetics 4 2 117 128 doi 10 1023 A 1023303109701 eISSN 1572 9737 ISSN 1566 0621 S2CID 25621332 Saimaa Ringed Seal WWF Finland Retrieved 2019 01 30 Turner Angela K Rose Chris 1989 Swallows amp Martins Boston Houghton Mifflin pp 5 34 85 87 ISBN 978 0 395 51174 9 Harris Larry D 1984 The Fragmented Forest Island Biogeography Theory and the Preservation of Biotic Diversity Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 71 92 ISBN 978 0 226 31763 2 Celka Z Drapikowska M 2008 Relics of cultivation in Central Europe Malva alcea L as an example Vegetation History and Archaeobotany Volume 17 Supplement 1 251 255 doi 10 1007 s00334 008 0151 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Relict biology amp oldid 1178356512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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