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Chinese researchers reveal law of cave biotic colonization in subtropical East Asia

XINHUA

發布於 2022年08月18日00:45 • Zhang Dan,Zhang Quan

Aerial photo taken on April 1, 2020 shows a waterfall in Wuyishan National Park, east China's Fujian Province. Wuyi Mountain has a comprehensive forest ecosystem representative of the mid-subtropical zone. It boasts diverse groups of plants due to its varying altitudes. (Xinhua/Jiang Kehong)

BEIJING, Aug. 18 (Xinhua) -- Chinese researchers have revealed the law of biotic colonization of cave organisms in subtropical East Asia, according to the Institute of Botany under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Caves are home to unique and fragile biotas with high levels of endemism. Subtropical East Asia holds the world's largest karst landform with numerous ancient caves, which harbor a high diversity of cave-dwelling organisms and are regarded as a biodiversity hotspot, said Wang Wei, head of the research team.

Through the analysis of phylogenetic, differentiation time and biogeography on 28 plants, animals and fungi in East Asian subtropical caves, they discovered that 88 percent of cave colonization events occurred after the Oligocene-Miocene boundary, and organisms from the surrounding forest were a major source for subtropical East Asian cave biodiversity.

Researchers also found nine instances where organisms returned to the surface from cave biotas. "This phenomenon indicates that caves are not only a sanctuary for forest species, but also a resource pool for forest ecosystem restoration," Wang said.

The study was published in the journal The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. ■

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