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dc.contributor.authorGuner, Tuncay H.
dc.contributor.authorDenk, Thomas
dc.date.accessioned2021-03-03T10:32:53Z
dc.date.available2021-03-03T10:32:53Z
dc.identifier.citationGuner T. H. , Denk T., "The genus Mahonia in the Miocene of Turkey: Taxonomy and biogeographic implications", REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY, cilt.175, ss.32-46, 2012
dc.identifier.issn0034-6667
dc.identifier.othervv_1032021
dc.identifier.otherav_232b6dc1-722b-41b4-8d72-80784d71d7de
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/28622
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2012.02.005
dc.description.abstractThe genus Mahonia has a disjunct modern distribution with the New World Group Occidentales in northwestern North America and Central America and the mostly Old World Group Orientales in Central and Southeast Asia. Group Orientales has one species in North America. Morphologically, the two groups can be distinguished by two main patterns of leaf venation. Leaflets in the Group Orientales have a palmate-festooned brochidodromous venation and those of Group Occidentales usually have a pinnate-brochidodromous to (semi)craspedodromous venation, with some intermediate forms. In North America both Orientales and Occidentales can be traced from Eocene to Miocene strata. No unequivocal records of Mahonia are known from East Asia. A few Oligocene to Pleistocene fossils from Europe can be assigned to Group Orientales and to the section Horridae Fedde of Group Occidentales. Here we report two new species of Mahonia from the Miocene of Turkey, which clearly fall within the morphological range of the Group Orientales. One species, also found in the Oligocene-Miocene of western North America, is quite similar to Himalayan and East and Southeast Asian modern species. The other resembles the single modern North American member of Group Orientales. The high diversity of Mahonia in Europe and Asia Minor from the Oligocene onwards includes members of at least four lineages. The close relationships of these fossils with contemporary North American species suggest that the genus had reached western Eurasia from North America via the North Atlantic during or prior to the Oligocene. Colonization of Central and East Asia may have occurred from western Eurasia or North America, or from both directions. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
dc.language.isoeng
dc.subjectYerbilimleri
dc.subjectTemel Bilimler (SCI)
dc.subjectTarımsal Bilimler
dc.subjectZiraat
dc.subjectBitki Koruma
dc.subjectFitopatoloji
dc.subjectPALEONTOLOJİ
dc.subjectTarım ve Çevre Bilimleri (AGE)
dc.subjectBitki ve Hayvan Bilimleri
dc.subjectBİTKİ BİLİMLERİ
dc.titleThe genus Mahonia in the Miocene of Turkey: Taxonomy and biogeographic implications
dc.typeMakale
dc.relation.journalREVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY
dc.contributor.departmentSwedish Museum of Natural History , ,
dc.identifier.volume175
dc.identifier.startpage32
dc.identifier.endpage46
dc.contributor.firstauthorID85814


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