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E-raamat: Faunal and Floral Migration and Evolution in SE Asia-Australasia

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: A A Balkema Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040899250
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: A A Balkema Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040899250

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This multidisciplinary book focuses on the relationships and interactions between palaeobiogeography, biogeography, dispersal, vicariance, migrations and evolution of organisms in the SE Asia-Australasian region. The book investigates biogeographic links between SE Asia and Australasia which go back more than 500 million years. It also focuses on the links between geological evolution and biological migrations and evolution in the region. It was in the SE Asian region that Alfred Russell Wallace established his biogeographic line, now known as Wallace's Line, which was the beginning of biogeography. Wallace also independently developed his theory of evolution based on his work in this area.;The book brings together, for the first time, geologists, palaeontologists, zoologists, botanists, entomologists, evolutionary biologists and archaeologists, in the one volume, to relate the region's geological past to its present biological peculiarities. The book is organized into six sections. Section 1 Paleobiogeographic Background provides overviews of the geological and tectonic evolution of SE Asia-Australasia, and changing patterns of land and sea for the last 540 million years. Section 2 Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Geology and Biogeography discusses Palaeozoic and Mesozoic biogeography of conodonts, brachiopods, plants, dinosaurs and radiolarians and the recognition of ancient biogeographic boundaries or Wallace Lines in the region. Section 3 Wallace's Line focuses on the biogeographic boundary established by Wallace, including the history of its establishment, its significance to biogeography in general and its applicability in the context of modern biogeography.;Section 4 Plant biogeography and evolution includes discussion on primitive angiosperms, the diaspora of the southern rushes, and environmental, climatic and evolutionary implications of plants and palynomorphs in the region. The biogeography and migration of insects, butterflies, birds, rodents and other non-primate mammals is discussed in section 5, Non Primates. The final section 6 Primates focuses on the biogeographic radiation, migration and evolution of primates and includes papers on the occurrence and migration of early hominids and the requirements for human colonization of Australia.
Preface 9(2)
Penny van Oosterzee
Introduction 11(2)
I. Metcalfe
J.M.B. Smith
M. Morwood
I. Davidson
Section
1. Palaeogeographic Background
13(44)
Palaeozoic and Mesozoic tectonic evolution and biogeography of SE Asia-Australasia
15(20)
Ian Metcalfe
Cenozoic reconstructions of SE Asia and the SW Pacific: changing patterns of land and sea
35(22)
Robert Hall
Section
2. Palaeozoic and Mesozoic geology and biogeography
57(54)
Cambrian to Permian conodont biogeography in East Asia-Australasia
59(14)
Robert S. Nicoll
Ian Metcalfe
Wallace Lines in eastern Gondwana: Palaeobiogeography of Australasian Permian Brachiopoda
73(12)
N.W. Archbold
A review of the Early Permian flora from Papua (West New Guinea)
85(12)
J.F. Rigby
A biogeographic comparison of the dinosaurs and associated vertebrate faunas from the Mesozoic of Australia and Southeast Asia
97(8)
John A. Long
Eric Buffetaut
Early Middle Jurassic (Aalenian) radiolarian fauna from the Xialu chert in the Yarlung Zangbo Suture Zone, southern Tibet
105(6)
Atsushi Matsuoka
Kenta Kobayashi
Toru Nagahashi
Qun Yang
Yujing Wang
Qinggao Zeng
Section
3. Wallace's Line
111(72)
Why Wallace drew the line: A re-analysis of Wallace's bird collections in the Malay Archipelago and the origins of biogeography
113(10)
Danielle Clode
Rory O'Brien
The linear approach to biogeography: Should we erase Wallace's Line?
123(10)
Walter R. Erdelen
Faunal exchange between Asia and Australia in the Tertiary as evidenced by recent butterflies
133(14)
Rienk de Jong
Why does the distribution of the Honeyeaters (Meliphagidae) conform so well to Wallace's Line?
147(6)
Hugh A. Ford
Human influences on vertebrate zoogeography: animal translocation and biological invasions across and to the east of Wallace's Line
153(18)
Tom Heinsohn
Wallace's line and marine organisms: the distribution of staghorn corals (Acropora) in Indonesia
171(12)
Carden C. Wallace
Section
4. Plant biogeography and evolution
183(70)
Why are there so many Primitive Angiosperms in the Rain Forests of Asia-Australasia?
185(16)
R.J. Morley
Australian Paleogene vegetation and environments: evidence for palaeo-Gondwanan elements in the fossil records of Lauraceae and Proteaceae
201(26)
Anthony J. Vadala
David R. Greenwood
Vegetation and climate in lowland Southeast Asia at the Last Glacial Maximum
227(10)
A. Peter Kershaw
Dan Penny
Sander van der Kaars
Gusti Anshari
Asha Thamotherampillai
The restiads invade the north: the diaspora of the Restionaceae
237(6)
Barbara G. Briggs
Evolutionary history of Alectryon in Australia
243(10)
Karen J. Edwards
Paul A. Gadek
Section
5. Non Primates
253(90)
Australasian distributions in Trichoptera (Insecta) - a frequent pattern or a rare case?
255(14)
Wolfram Mey
Butterflies and Wallace's Line: faunistic patterns and explanatory hypotheses within the south-east Asian butterflies
269(18)
R. L. Kitching
R. Eastwood
K. Hurley
The vertebrate fauna of the Wallacean Island Interchange Zone: the basis of inbalance and impoverishment
287(24)
Allen Keast
Dispersal versus vicariance, artifice rather than contest
311(8)
B. Michaux
The Australian rodent fauna, flotilla's, flotsam or just fleet footed?
319(4)
H. Godthelp
Corroboration of the Garden of Eden Hypothesis
323(10)
Thomas H. Rich
Timothy F. Flannery
Peter Trusler
Patricia Vickers-Rich
Mammals in Sulawesi: where did they come from and when, and what happened to them when they got there?
333(10)
Colin Groves
Section
6. Primates
343(2)
Radiation and Evolution of Three Macaque Species, Macaca fascicularis, M. radiata and M. sinica, as Related to the Geographic Changes in the Pleistocene of Southeast Asia
345(20)
R.-L. Pan
C.E. Oxnard
Borneo as a biogeographic barrier to Asian-Australasian migration
365(8)
Douglas Brandon-Jones
Modelling Divergence, Inter-breeding and Migration: Species Evolution in a Changing World
373(14)
Charles Oxnard
Ken Wessen
Early hominid occupation of Flores, East Indonesia, and its wider significance
387(12)
Mike Morwood
The requirements for human colonisation of Australia
399(10)
Iain Davidson
Did early hominids cross sea gaps on natural rafts?
409
J. M. B. Smith


Ian Metcalfe, Jeremy M.B. Smith, Mike Norwood, Iain Davidson