4.8 Article

Deep-time climate legacies affect origination rates of marine genera

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2105769118

Keywords

climate change; fossil record; paleoclimate; evolution; macroevolution

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [KI 806/16-1, STE 2360/2-1, FOR 2332]
  2. European Research Council [741413]

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The research highlights the significant impact of paleoclimate interactions on the origination probability of marine fossil genera, with short-term cooling overlaying a long-term cooling trend leading to a 27.8% increase in origination probability. Additionally, continental fragmentation has a similar effect on origination rates, supporting the importance of allopatric speciation through habitat fragmentation in the deep-time fossil record. The complex nature of paleoclimate interactions can help explain contradictory conclusions on the relationship between temperature and origination in previous literature, emphasizing the need to consider complex interactions in evolutionary studies.
Biodiversity dynamics are shaped by a complex interplay between current conditions and historic legacy. The interaction of short- and long-term climate change may mask the true relationship of evolutionary responses to climate change if not specifically accounted for. These paleoclimate interactions have been demonstrated for extinction risk and biodiversity change, but their importance for origination dynamics remains untested. Here, we show that origination probability in marine fossil genera is strongly affected by paleoclimate interactions. Overall, origination probability increases by 27.8% [95% CI (27.4%, 28.3%)] when a short-term cooling adds to a long-term cooling trend. This large effect is consistent through time and all studied groups. The mechanisms of the detected effect might be manifold but are likely connected to increased allopatric speciation with eustatic sea level drop caused by sustained global cooling. We tested this potential mechanism through which paleoclimate interactions can act on origination rates by additionally examining a proxy for habitat fragmentation. This proxy, continental fragmentation, has a similar effect on origination rates as paleoclimate interactions, supporting the importance of allopatric speciation through habitat fragmentation in the deep-time fossil record. The identified complex nature of paleoclimate interactions might explain contradictory conclusions on the relationship between temperature and origination in the previous literature. Our results highlight the need to account for complex interactions in evolutionary studies both between and among biotic and abiotic factors.

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