Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T23:17:46.092Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Direct evidence of central European forest refugia during the last glacial period based on mollusc fossils

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Abstract

Although there is evidence from molecular studies for the existence of central European last glacial refugia for temperate species, there is still a great lack of direct fossil records to confirm this theory. Here we bring such evidence in the form of fossil shells from twenty strictly forest land snail species, which were recorded in radiocarbon-dated late glacial or older mollusc assemblages of nine non-interrupted mollusc successions situated in the Western Carpathians, and one in the Bohemian Massif. We proposed that molluscs survived the last glacial period in central Europe in isolated small patches of broadleaf forest, which we unequivocally demonstrate for two sites of last glacial maximum age.

Type
Articles
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Benke, M., Brendle, M., Albrecht, C., and Wilke, T. Pleistocene phylogeography and phylogenetic concordance in cold-adapted spring snail (Bythinella spp.). Molecular Ecology 18, (2009). 890903.Google Scholar
Bennett, K.D. The spread of Fagus grandiflora Gross eastern North America during the last 18,000 years. Journal of Biogeography 12, (1985). 147164.Google Scholar
Bilton, D.T., Mirol, P.M., Mascheretti, S., Fredga, K., Zima, J., and Searle, J.B. Mediterranean Europe as an area of endemism for small mammals rather than a source for northwards postglacial colonization. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 265, (1998). 12191226.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birks, H.H. The importance of plant macrofossils in the reconstruction of Lateglacial vegetation and climate: examples from Scotland, western Norway and Minnesota, USA. Quaternary Science Review 22, (2003). 453473.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. Radiocarbon 51, (2009). 337360.Google Scholar
Carcaillet, Ch., and Vernet, J.-L. Comments on “The Full-Glacial Forests of Central and Southern Europe” by Willis et al.. Quaternary Research 55, (2001). 368387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, P.U., Dyke, A.S., Shakun, J.D., Carlson, A.E., Clark, J., Wohlfarth, B., Mitrovica, J.X., Hostetler, S.W., and McCabe, M.A. The Last Glacial maximum. Science 325, 5941 (2009). 710714.Google Scholar
Darola, J., and Ložek, V. Kvartérní fauna a stratigrafie převisu v rezervaci Brálie u Malých Kršteňan. Českosloveský Kras 33, (1982). 5367.Google Scholar
Davies, P. Snails: Archaeology and Landscape Change. (2008). Oxbow Books, Oxford.Google Scholar
De Lattin, G. Grundriß der Zoogeographie. (1967). Verlag Gustav Fischer, Jena.Google Scholar
Girod, A. Land snails from late glacial and Early Holocene Italian sites. Quaternary International 244, 1 (2011). 105116.Google Scholar
Goodfriend, G.A., and Stipp, J.J. Limestone and the problem of radiocarbon dating of land-snail carbonate. Geology 11, 10 (1983). 575577.Google Scholar
Horáček, I., and Ložek, V. Biostratigraphic investigation in the Hámorská Cave (Slovak Karst). Cílek, V. Krasové sedimenty. Fosilní záznam klimatických oscilací a změn prostředí. (1993). Knihovna ČSS, Praha. 4960.Google Scholar
Horáček, I. Small vertebrates in the Weichselian series in Dzeravá skala cave: list of the samples and a brief summary. Kaminska, L., Kozlowski, J.K., and Svoboda, J.A. Pleistocene Environments and Archaelogy of the Dzerava skala Cave, Lesser Carpathians, Slovakia. (2006). 157167. (PAN Krakow) Google Scholar
Horáček, I., and Ložek, V. Molluscan and vertebrate successions from the Veľká Ružínská Cave (East Slovakia). Terra Praehistorica. Beiträge zur Ur- und Frühgeschichte Mitteleuropas 48, (2007). 224232.Google Scholar
Jankovská, V., and Pokorný, P. Forest vegetation of the last full-glacial period in the Western Carpathians (Slovakia and Czech Republic). Preslia 80, (2008). 307324.Google Scholar
Juřičková, L., Horáčková, J., Ložek, V., and Horsák, M. Impoverishment of recent floodplain forest mollusc fauna in the lower Ohře River (Czech Republic) as a result of prehistoric human impact. Boreas 42, (2013). 932946.Google Scholar
Juřičková, L., Horáčková, J., Jansová, A., and Ložek, V. Mollusc succession of a prehistoric settlement area during Holocene — case study of the České středohoří Mts. (Czech Republic). The Holocene 23, 12 (2013). 18091821.Google Scholar
Kerney, M.P., Cameron, R.A.D., and Jungbluth, J.H. Die Landchnecken Nord- und Mitteleuropas. Ein Bestimmungsbuch für Biologen und Naturfreunde. (1983). Verlag Paul Parey, Hamburg and Berlin.Google Scholar
Kotlík, P., Deffontaine, V., Mascheretti, S., Zima, J., Michaux, J.R., and Searle, J.B. A northern glacial refugium for bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 103, (2006). 1486014864.Google Scholar
Ložek, V., and Horáček, I. Vývoj přírody Plešivecké planiny v poledové době. Ochrana prírody, Výskumné práce z ochrany prírody 6A, (1988). 151175.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Quartärmollusken der Tschechoslowakei. (1964). Czech Academy of Science, Prague.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Faunengeschichtliche Grundlinien zur spät- und nacheiszeitlichen Entwicklung der Molluskenbestände in Mitteleuropa. Rozpr. Českoslov. akad. věd 92/4, (1982). 1106.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Postglaciální souvrství v převisu na západním svahu Kobyly u Koněprus. Československý kras 40, (1989). 5772.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Palaeoecology of Quaternary Mollusca. Antropozoikum 24, (2000). 3559.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Last Glacial paleoenvironments of the West Carpathians in the light of fossil malacofauna. Anthropozoikum 26, (2006). 7384.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Malakostratigrafie holocenního pěnovce u Stankovan na severním Slovensku. Zprávy o geol. výzkumech v roce 2008. (2009). Czech Geological Society, Praha. 229232.Google Scholar
Ložek, V. Malacostratigraphy of the entrance of the Medvedia jaskyňa Cave(National Park Slovenský raj - Slovak Paradise). geoscience reprts for 2011. (2012). Czech Geological Survey, Praha. pp. 219222.Google Scholar
Magnin, F. Mollusques continentaux et histoire quaternaire des milieux mediterraneens. (DOctor thesis) (1991). L'Universite DÁix-Marseille II, U.R.F. Des Sciences Geographiques et de l'amengement, 340 Google Scholar
Magri, D. Patterns of post-glacial spread and the extent of glacial refugia of European beech (Fagus sylvatica). Journal of Biogeography 35, (2008). 450463.Google Scholar
Magri, D., Vendramin, G.G., Comps, B., Dupanloup, I., Geburek, T., Gomory, D., Latalowa, M., Litt, T., Paule, L., Roure, J.M., Tantau, I., van der Knaap, W.O., Peti, R.J., and de Beaulieu, J.L. A new scenario for the Quaternary history of European beech populations: palaeobotanical evidence and genetic consequences. New Phytologist 171, (2006). 199221.Google Scholar
Normand, S., Ricklefs, R.E., Skov, F., Bladt, J., Tackenberg, O., and Svenning, J.-Ch. Postglacial migration supplements climate in determining plant species ranges in Europe. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 278, (2011). 36443653.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pfenninger, M., Posada, D., and Magnin, F. Evidence for the survival of the Pleistocene climatic change in Northern refugia by the land snail Trochoidea geyeri (Soós 1926) (Helicellinae, Stylommatophora). BMC Evolutionary Biology 3, (2003). 8 Google Scholar
Pigati, J.S., Rech, J.A., and Nekola, J.C. Radiocarbon dating of small terrestrial gastropod shells in North America. Quaternary Geochronology 5, (2010). 519532.Google Scholar
Pinceel, J., Jordaens, K., Pfenninger, M., and Backeljau, T. Rangewide phylogeography of a terrestrial slug in Europe: evidence for Alpine refugia and rapid colonization after the Pleistocene glaciations. Molecular Ecology 14, (2005). 11331150.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rull, V. Microrefugia. Journal of Biogeography 36, (2009). 481484.Google Scholar
Schmitt, T. Biogeographical and evolutionary importance of the European high mountain system. Frontiers in Zoology 6, (2009). 9 Google Scholar
Schmitt, T., and Varga, Z. Extra-Mediterranean refugia: the rule and not the exception?. Frontiers in Zoology 9, (2012). 22 Google Scholar
Sommer, R.S., and Nadachowski, A. Glacial refugia of mammals in Europe: evidence from fossil records. Mammal Reviews 36, (2006). 251265.Google Scholar
Sommer, R.S., and Zachos, F.E. Fossil evidence and phylogeography of temperate species: ‘glacial refugia’ and post-glacial recolonization. Journal of Biogeography 36, (2009). 20132020.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, J.R., Lister, A.M., Barnes, I., and Dalén, L. Refugia revisited: individualistic responses of species in space and time. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 277, (2010). 661671.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Svenning, J.-C., Normand, S., and Kageyama, M. Glacial refugia of temperate trees in Europe: insights from species distribution modelling. Journal of Ecology 96, (2008). 11171127.Google Scholar
Štamol, V., and Poje, M. The fossil and recent malacofauna of the Susak (Croatia) (Gastropoda: Prosobranchia, Basommatophora, Stylommatophora). Malacologische Abhandlungen 19, 11 (1998). 103117.Google Scholar
Ursenbacher, S., Carlsson, M., Helfer, V., Tegelström, H., and Fumagalli, L. Phylogeography and Pleistocene refugia of the adder (Vipera berus) as inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequence data. Molecular Ecology 15, (2006). 34253437.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Willis, K.J., Rudner, E., and Sumegi, P. The full-glacial forests of central and southeastern Europe. Quaternary Research 53, (2000). 203213.Google Scholar
Willis, K.J., and van Andel, T.H. Trees or no trees? The environments of central and eastern Europe during the Last Glaciation. Quaternary Science Reviews 23, (2004). 23692387.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Juřičková et al. supplementary material

Supplementary Material

Download Juřičková et al. supplementary material(File)
File 20.8 MB