4.7 Article

Mammalian beta diversity in the Great Basin, western USA: palaeontological data suggest deep origin of modern macroecological structure

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 479-490

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00183.x

Keywords

Alpha diversity; beta diversity; climate change; desert ecosystem; gamma diversity; Great Basin; Great Plains; palaeoecology; tectonic change

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Aim Recent work indicates that desert assemblages have elevated beta (beta) diversity (between-locality turnover of species composition). This study compares beta diversities between the Great Basin and the Great Plains of the western USA over the last 17 Myr. Today, the Great Basin is a topographically diverse desert scrubland to woodland and the Great Plains are low-relief temperate grassland, but 17 Ma they were more similar in topography, climate and land cover. A georeferenced database of mammal occurrences, complied from several sources, is used to test two hypotheses for the elevation of Great Basin beta diversity: (1) that tectonic change of the topography has driven increased habitat packing in high- and low-elevation habitats, and (2) that climatic cycling in the Pleistocene has driven faunas from neighbouring provinces to overlap in the region. Location The Great Basin of the USA, centred on Nevada, and the central Great Plains of the USA, centred on Nebraska. Methods Mammalian faunal lists compiled from published records and the records of many museums, available online, were partitioned into time-slices ranging from the recent to 17 Myr old. Beta diversity was calculated for each time-slice in two ways: multiplicative beta diversity using first-order jackknife richness, and additive beta diversity using Simpson's evenness. Results Beta diversity is elevated in Nevada relative to Nebraska today. Beta diversity has been higher in the Great Basin since the Pleistocene and possibly since the late Early Hemphillian (c. 7 Ma). Beta diversity in the Late Barstovian (c. 13.5 Ma) of the Great Plains was higher even than beta diversity in the Great Basin of today. Main conclusions The elevated beta diversity in the Hemphillian supports the tectonic change hypothesis. The patterns of beta diversity in the Recent, Pleistocene and Hemphillian all suggest that local-scale processes are important. The beta diversity of the Late Barstovian Great Plains supports other studies indicating increased primary productivity or species packing.

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