Responses of Non-volant Mammals to Late Quaternary Climatic Changes in the Wet Tropics Region of North-eastern Australia
In: Wildlife research, Band 24, Heft 5, S. 493
ISSN: 1448-5494, 1035-3712
It is generally recognised that the distribution of vertebrates in rainforest
and wet sclerophyll forest of the Wet Tropics region of north-eastern
Australia is profoundly influenced by the formation of two rainforest refugia
at the height of Pleistocene glacial periods. Anomalies in the distribution of
non-volant mammals indicate that other events may be equally important. In
this paper, past geographical occurrence of non-volant mammals is examined by
equating the mammals' known temperature tolerance with palaeoclimatic
temperature zones. It is hypothesised that dispersal and vicariant phases
taking place since the most recent glacial period have had a profound
influence on current patterns of distribution. A major dispersal phase of
cool-adapted species occurred after the glacial period, and continuous
populations were subsequently fragmented into upland isolates by expansion of
warm rainforest during the late post-glacial period. These upland isolates
remain substantially unchanged to the present day. Species shared either with
New Guinea or south-eastern Australia arrived in the region during the most
recent post-glacial period. Clarification of periods of vicariance and
dispersal provides a conceptual framework for testing relative divergences of
populations within and between regions.