Jamun Origin Traced to India, New Study Challenges Australia and Southeast Asia Theory
India has been identified as the origin and the early diversification centre of Jamun (Syzygium) which is widely known as the fruit-bearing genus. According to a recent study released the plant lineage can trace back to the nearly 80 million years and challenged the earlier beliefs that which has placed its origin in the Australia or Southeast Asia. The study was conducted by the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences under the Department of Science and Technology. And the research highlights the India’s pivotal role in the evolutionary history of the plant species and biodiversity.
The study reveals that the genus Syzygium which is commonly known as Jamun and it was originated in the East Gondwanan region, As with India serving as the major centre for the early diversification.
The earlier theories have suggested that Syzygium evolved around 51 million years ago in the regions like Australia or Southeast Asia.
However new fossil evidence have indicates that the genus existed in the India as early as 55 million years ago and pushed back its evolutionary timeline significantly.
This finding also establishes the India as a key origin point from where the plant later spread to other parts of the world.
Also major breakthrough came from fossil findings in the Kasauli Formation of Himachal Pradesh. In where the researchers have discovered the well-preserved plant and it remains dating back to the Early Miocene period which was around 20 million years ago.
The study identified the 11 fossil leaves of Syzygium and which are scientifically named Syzygium paleosalicifolium and used the advanced techniques such as microscopy, morphological analysis and statistical validation.
These fossils have provided the crucial evidence to reconstruct the continuous evolutionary history of the genus in India.
Researchers have used the combination of the modern scientific techniques to validate their findings.
Also the detailed analysis of the fossil leaf morphology which includes the shape, size and venation patterns and it was conducted and compared with the existing plant species.
The study involved the microscopic examination and comparison with global herbarium databases and also the statistical analysis based on 22 morphological characteristics.
Additionally the previously discovered fossils from the Paleogene and Neogene periods (60–20 million years ago) were re-examined and allowed the scientists to build the comprehensive evolutionary timeline.
The findings also challenge the long-standing assumptions about the plant evolution and migration. The study have suggests that Syzygium originated in India and later dispersed to the Southeast Asia and Australia rather than the other way around.
This reshapes the understanding of,
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