4.7 Article

The preservation potential of terrestrial biogeographic patterns

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2927

Keywords

biogeography; palaeobiogeography; conservation palaeobiology; extinction; beta diversity; species richness

Funding

  1. NSERC [RGPIN-2018-05305]
  2. Canadian Museum of Nature Research Activity Grant
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  4. Federal Ministry for Education and Research in Germany

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Extinction events in the geological past are similar to the present-day biodiversity crisis in that they produce dramatic changes in the spatial distributions of species. Reconstructing palaeobiogeographic patterns from fossils allows us to study the long-term processes governing the formation of regional biotas, but the extent to which biogeographic patterns can be preserved in the fossil record is not well understood.
Extinction events in the geological past are similar to the present-day biodiversity crisis in that they have a pronounced biogeography, producing dramatic changes in the spatial distributions of species. Reconstructing palaeobiogeographic patterns from fossils therefore allows us to examine the long-term processes governing the formation of regional biotas, and potentially helps build spatially explicit models for future biodiversity loss. However, the extent to which biogeographic patterns can be preserved in the fossil record is not well understood. Here, we perform a suite of simulations based on the present-day distribution of North American mammals, aimed at quantifying the preservation potential of beta diversity and spatial richness patterns over extinction events of varying intensities, and after applying a stepped series of taphonomic filters. We show that taphonomic biases related to body size are the biggest barrier to reconstructing biogeographic patterns over extinction events, but that these may be compensated for by both the small mammal record preserved in bird castings, as well as range expansion in surviving species. Overall, our results suggest that the preservation potential of biogeographic patterns is surprisingly high, and thus that the fossil record represents an invaluable dataset recording the changing spatial distribution of biota over key intervals in Earth History.

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