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The distribution of forest passerine birds and Quaternary climatic change in tropical Africa
Authors:A W Diamond  and A C Hamilton
Institution:Department of Zoology, University of Nairobi, P.O. Box 30197, Nairobi, Kenya;School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, The New University of Ulster, Coleraine, N. Ireland
Abstract:A cluster analysis of the distribution patterns of forest passerine birds in tropical Africa showed that they could be divided into three main distribution types: those of restricted distribution (144 species), those of disjunct distributions across West, Central and rarely to East Africa (65 species) and those of very wide distribution (81 species). Centres of species richness, endemism and disjunction coincide spatially, and are identified as forest refugia, where forest persisted throughout Quaternary climatic vicissitudes. These distribution patterns agree with modern interpretations of Quaternary palaeoclimatic changes, which show that glacial periods were arid and interglacials humid. Glacial periods were therefore too dry for montane forest to have spread into areas at present occupied by lowland forest, as advocated by Moreau and other supporters of ihe "pluvial" theory; montane forest is probably as extensive now as at any time during the Quaternary and there is no evidence of past connections between currently isolated montane forests. Bird distribution can be explained largely by slow dispersal outwards from refugia as climatic conditions allowed forest to spread, combined with a relaxing of the distinction between "montane" and "lowland" species under conditions of reduced interspecific competition.
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