4.8 Article

Out of the tropics, but how? Fossils, bridge species, and thermal ranges in the dynamics of the marine latitudinal diversity gradient

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1308997110

关键词

biodiversity; biogeography; climate; macroecology; macroevolution

资金

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. John Simon Guggenheim Foundation
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Exobiology Program
  4. University of California
  5. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV 0644-10]
  6. Slovak Scientific Grant Agency [VEGA 0068-11]
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology [0919451] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Directorate For Geosciences
  10. Division Of Earth Sciences [0921800] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  11. Division Of Earth Sciences
  12. Directorate For Geosciences [0922156] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Latitudinal diversity gradients are underlain by complex combinations of origination, extinction, and shifts in geographic distribution and therefore are best analyzed by integrating paleontological and neontological data. The fossil record of marine bivalves shows, in three successive late Cenozoic time slices, that most clades (operationally here, genera) tend to originate in the tropics and then expand out of the tropics (OTT) to higher latitudes while retaining their tropical presence. This OTT pattern is robust both to assumptions on the preservation potential of taxa and to taxonomic revisions of extant and fossil species. Range expansion of clades may occur via bridge species, which violate climate-niche conservatism to bridge the tropical-temperate boundary in most OTT genera. Substantial time lags (similar to 5 Myr) between the origins of tropical clades and their entry into the temperate zone suggest that OTT events are rare on a per-clade basis. Clades with higher diversification rates within the tropics are the most likely to expand OTT and the most likely to produce multiple bridge species, suggesting that high speciation rates promote the OTT dynamic. Although expansion of thermal tolerances is key to the OTT dynamic, most latitudinally widespread species instead achieve their broad ranges by tracking widespread, spatially-uniform temperatures within the tropics (yielding, via the nonlinear relation between temperature and latitude, a pattern opposite to Rapoport's rule). This decoupling of range size and temperature tolerance may also explain the differing roles of species and clade ranges in buffering species from background and mass extinctions.

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