Orchids

How are there bulbophyllums in Africa and Australia? How did they get there?


How are there bulbophyllums in Africa and Australia? How did they get there?

by Lapis-lad

1 Comment

  1. empetraem

    Cursory Google search says Australia used to be part of a landmass called Gondwana, containing Africa, Australia, parts of Polynesia and New Zealand, and the Indian subcontinent 600 million years ago.

    Coincidentally Wikipedia says Bulbophyllum is found in a bunch of those locations. Wikipedia also suggests that Bulbophyllum emerged in the early Miocene, which went from 23 to 5 Mya, which, granted, is like way shorter than when Gondwana was around. Basically they spread towards Africa from Asia, getting more diverse over time.

    Bulbophyllum and other orchids have teeeeeny seeds, so they probably spread and grew further out than the parent plants over successive generations. IIRC wind patterns tend to go east to west over SE Asia and India, towards Africa.

    I’d imagine with how slow orchids grow and how slow evolution goes it would’ve taken way longer than 23 ish million years to get a different species.

    https://preview.redd.it/c5dbdfxg8xsd1.jpeg?width=1170&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=89a2f84c8da95a606f68bb0fcb3fefdd2c28fcb6

Write A Comment

Pin