Antitropical distribution

Antitropical (alternatives include biantitropical or amphitropical) distribution is a type of disjunct distribution where a species or clade exists at comparable latitudes across the equator but not in the tropics. For example, a species may be found north of the Tropic of Cancer and south of the Tropic of Capricorn, but not in between.[1] With increasing time since dispersal, the disjunct populations may be the same variety, species, or clade.[2] How the life forms distribute themselves to the opposite hemisphere when they can't normally survive in the middle depends on the species; plants may have their seed spread through wind, animal, or other methods and then germinate upon reaching the appropriate climate, while sea life may be able to travel through the tropical regions in a larval state or by going through deep ocean currents with much colder temperatures than on the surface. For the American amphitropical distribution, dispersal has been generally agreed to be more likely than vicariance from a previous distribution including the tropics in North and South America.[2]

  1. ^ Raven, Peter H. (1963). "Amphitropical Relationships in the Floras of North and South America". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 38 (2): 151–177. doi:10.1086/403797. ISSN 0033-5770. S2CID 85310607.
  2. ^ a b Simpson, Michael G.; Johnson, Leigh A.; Villaverde, Tamara; Guilliams, C. Matt (2017). "American amphitropical disjuncts: Perspectives from vascular plant analyses and prospects for future research". American Journal of Botany. 104 (11): 1600–1650. doi:10.3732/ajb.1700308. hdl:10261/168338. ISSN 0002-9122.

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