2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.2011.01788.x
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Palaeoclimatic models help to understand current distribution of Caucasian forest species

Abstract: Spatial and temporal constraints on dispersal explain the absence of species from areas with potentially suitable conditions. Previous studies have shown that post-glacial recolonization has shaped the current ranges of many species, yet it is not completely clear to what extent interspecific differences in range size depend on different dispersal rates. The inferred boundaries of glacial refugia are difficult to validate, and may bias spatial distribution models (SDMs) that consider post-glacial dispersal con… Show more

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Cited by 99 publications
(80 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(103 reference statements)
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“…The Greater Caucasus therefore, especially its central, the highest and the steepest part, has limited importance as a glacial refugium. Our study supports the existence of two distinct refugia in the Lesser Caucasus, based on the deep genetic differences between D. mixta lineages from the south-eastern Black Sea Coast, and central Georgia (Tarkhnishvili, Thorpe and Arntzen, 2000;Tarkhnishvili, Gavashelishvili and Mumladze, 2012). It suggests that the "Central Georgian" refugium was located in the eastern part of Meskheti Mountains (locations 1-2, fig.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…The Greater Caucasus therefore, especially its central, the highest and the steepest part, has limited importance as a glacial refugium. Our study supports the existence of two distinct refugia in the Lesser Caucasus, based on the deep genetic differences between D. mixta lineages from the south-eastern Black Sea Coast, and central Georgia (Tarkhnishvili, Thorpe and Arntzen, 2000;Tarkhnishvili, Gavashelishvili and Mumladze, 2012). It suggests that the "Central Georgian" refugium was located in the eastern part of Meskheti Mountains (locations 1-2, fig.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Genetic studies of other small, less mobile animals, the Caucasian salamander (Mertensiella caucasica), for example, or the large endemic Caucasian snails (Helix buchi, H. goderdziana) (Tarkhnishvili et al, 2000;Mumladze et al, 2013), also suggest that humid forest refugia of the Western Caucasus (Zeist and Bottema, 1991;Tarkhnishvili et al, 2012;Tarkhnishvili, 2014) were historically fragmented, rather than continuous. According to these studies, the most prominent division was between current Central Georgia (where the entire range of D. mixta is located) and the southeastern Black Sea Coast (where the range of D. clarkorum, the sister species of D. mixta is located).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The importance of the western Caucasus, especially the Colchis region, as a glacial refugium where, among others, Neogene relict species survived as well as a centre of ongoing radiation has increasingly been appreciated (Hewitt, 2000;Pokryszko et al, 2011;Tarkhnishvili et al, 2012;Nakhutsrishvili, 2013;Tarkhnishvili, 2014;Walther et al, 2014). There is dissent, however, on whether there existed a single continuous forest refugium at the eastern Black Sea coast as implied by some studies (van Andel and Tzedakis, 1996;Kikvidze and Ohsawa, 2001;Pokryszko et al, 2011;Tarkhnishvili et al, 2012;Volkova et al, 2013;Wielstra et al, 2013) or multiple forest refugia (Tarkhnishvili et al, 2000;Mumladze et al, 2013;Tarkhnishvili, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The human activity caused substantial landscape changes in the region (Zazanashvili et al 2004;Abbo et al 2010;Tarkhnishvili et al 2012). Currently, the range of the gazelles is fragmented: the Caucasian geographic population is isolated (Mallon 2008) and, in addition, individual populations form smaller isolates in some parts within the "mainland" range (Durmuş 2010).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%