The distribution boundaries of flora and fauna

Of what use are biogeographic classifications? In the past, classifying the flora and fauna into regions was primarily a descriptive event. Today, however, biogeographic classification, like biological taxonomy, is not an end in itself but rather a means to understanding the causative factors involved in evolution, whether they be the vicissitudes of geologic events or the dynamics of biological adaptation. In this sense a classification is not right or wrong so much as it is useful or not.

The sorting of animals and plants into major biogeographic regions is a useful, hypothesis-generating activity. When two taxa of organisms show similar variations in distribution, it is theorized that they have been subject to the same kinds of evolutionary processes, such as ecological constraints that favour certain adaptations or random geographic changes. In a survey of many taxa in a biological community, all may have similar distributional patterns; they may have been restrained by the same geographic barriers or been influenced similarly by climatic factors. When comparing the phytogeographic kingdoms with the zoogeographic realms, one is struck by both the broad agreement in outlines and the differences in details.

Curious discrepancies in these patterns do exist. Some organisms have been able to “skip over” climatic zones so that they are found in both northern and southern temperate zones but not in the intervening tropics. Others appear to have exceptional abilities to disperse to remote, isolated regions and survive. For example, members of the bird family Rallidae (rail) have dispersed throughout many islands, including New Caledonia, Lord Howe Island, Guam, and even the aptly named Inaccessible Island, and the giant tortoises (Geochelone) are found on the Galapagos Islands off the west coast of South America as well as on Seychelles off the east coast of Africa.

Discrepancies also exist between animal and plant distributions. For example, a separate kingdom, the South African (Capensic) kingdom, is recognized for plants but not for animals. In New Guinea the flora is classified in the Paleotropical kingdom, but the fauna is not considered to be of the corresponding Paleotropical realm and instead is classified in the Notogaean realm. Some of these discrepancies are more comprehensible than others. The lack of a faunal Capensic division may simply be a function of the greater mobility of animals. Such divisions, if they ever did exist within zoogeography, have been “swallowed up” by the surrounding Neogaean and Afrotropical faunas. Other differences, especially that of the flora and fauna of New Guinea, are less explicable.

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Land and freshwater plant groups are older than the groups of animals with which they coexist; thus, the major phytogeographic regions reflect a more ancient phase in Earth history than do the zoogeographic regions. Because plants are less mobile, their associations have survived into the present relatively intact. The division of the major regions into minor subdivisions helps to elucidate more recent events in Earth history as well as the dispersal capabilities, adaptive strategies, and ecological relationships of the biota.

The importance of the climate’s influence on biotic dispersal must not be overlooked. Marine organisms tend to be distributed along climatic lines, and many terrestrial groups, such as migratory birds, are so mobile that they have become spread across two or more major biogeographic areas. Although they are widely dispersed, they have specialized within northern and southern temperate zones, which are separated by the unsuitable tropical regions between.

These odd, disjunct distributions serve as reminders that biogeographic regions only sketch the outlines of organismal distributions and that they do not explain every case. What they are useful for is to point toward dispersal mechanisms, past climatic corridors, and other important biological phenomena.

Flora

Six floral kingdoms—Boreal (Holarctic), Paleotropical, Neotropical, South African (Capensic), Australian, and Antarctic—are commonly distinguished (Figure 1). These kingdoms are further broken down into subkingdoms and regions, over which there is some dispute. The kingdoms are not sharply delineated, and the families of higher plants vary in the degree to which they are found across the phytogeographic kingdoms, with their distribution being only partly dependent on their age. The following arrangement is based on the work of Ronald Good (1974).