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Chapter 24: History and Biogeography

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Title: Chapter 24: History and Biogeography


1
Chapter 24 History and Biogeography
  • Robert E. Ricklefs
  • The Economy of Nature, Fifth Edition

2
History and Biogeography
  • The origin and maintenance of the earths
    biodiversity is one of ecologys central issues
  • has earths biodiversity been maintained at a
    steady state or has it varied through time?
  • the answer to this question can help us choose
    between equilibrium and nonequilibrium viewpoints
  • We can look to the fossil record for evidence of
    past changes in biological diversity
  • the record over the past 600 million years yields
    useful information about the history of
    biodiversity

3
Diversity has generally increased over geologic
time
4
Biodiversity in the Fossil Record
  • Findings vary for different groups
  • diversity has remained constant in some groups,
    while increasing in others
  • increasing in flowering plants, fishes, birds,
    and mammals
  • diversity has also decreased dramatically in many
    groups at various times
  • regional species pools have declined because of
    catastrophic events and grown because of
    biological diversification
  • we must question whether ecological systems ever
    truly achieve equilibrium

5
The Tropical Zone
  • Can we find explanations for tropical
    biodiversity at large temporal and spatial
    scales?
  • tropical conditions appeared on earth much
    earlier than colder conditions
  • tropical and subtropical zones now cover much
    more area than temperate and polar regions, even
    more so in times past

6
A Record of Dramatic Changes
  • Both high and low latitudes experienced drastic
    fluctuations in climate and extent during the Ice
    Age of the past 2 million years
  • during periods of glacial expansion
  • the tropics experienced low rainfall and reduced
    temperatures
  • rain forest habitats were restricted and
    fragmented

7
Biological History
  • The history of life reveals itself to us in
  • the geochemical record of past environments
  • fossil traces left by long-extinct taxa
  • geographic distributions and evolutionary
    relationships of living species
  • the most obvious consequences of this history is
    the nonuniform distribution of plant and animal
    forms over the earths surface
  • every part of the earth has a distinctive fauna
    and flora

8
Phylogenetic Effects
  • Morphology, physiology, and behavior of organisms
    reflect
  • conditions and resources of their present
    environments
  • constraints imposed by the characteristics of
    their ancestors
  • marsupials are presently most diverse in
    Australia
  • this pattern is not the result of unique
    ecological properties of the continent of
    Australia, but rather of evolutionary inertia
  • characteristics shared by a lineage irrespective
    of environmental factors are phylogenetic effects

9
Australias unusual terrestrial organisms (a)
Eucalyptus (b) Banksia inflorescence (C ) red
kangaroo
10
Phylogenetic effects influence ecology.
  • Phylogenetic effects affect the structure and
    functioning of ecosystems
  • would Australian ecosystems function in the same
    manner if eucalyptus were replaced by some other
    kinds of plants?
  • would forests of different kinds of trees be less
    susceptible to fires?
  • if so, what consequences would this have for
    ecosystem function?

11
The history of life can be gauged by the
geological time scale.
  • Ecologists recognize key features of the
    geological record
  • earth formed 4.5 billion years ago
  • life arose within the first billion years
  • life remained primitive for most of earths
    history
  • ancient physical environments were quite
    different from those of the present
  • the early atmosphere had little oxygen and early
    microbes used anaerobic metabolism
  • increased oxygen led to diversification of
    complex life forms

12
The Geologic Record
  • About 590 Mya, most of the modern phyla of
    invertebrates appeared in the fossil record
  • these early animals began to protect themselves
    with hard shells, which make excellent fossils
  • the Paleozoic era is thus the first of three
    major divisions of geologic time reflecting
    diversification of animals
  • Paleozoic 590 Mya to 248 Mya
  • Mesozoic 248 Mya to 65 Mya
  • Cenozoic 65 Mya to present

13
Hardened outer shells in the Cambrian seas
14
Continental Drift
  • The continents are islands of low-density rock
    floating on the denser material of the earths
    interior and carried along by convection
    currents
  • the movements of the continents over time are
    called continental drift
  • These movements have two important ecological
    consequences
  • positions of continents, ocean basins influence
    climate
  • continental drift creates and breaks barriers to
    dispersal

15
Continental Drift Mesozoic to Present
  • In the early Mesozoic era, 200 Mya, continents
    formed a single giant landmass called Pangaea
  • By 144 Mya (beginning of the Cretaceous period)
    the northern continents (Laurasia) had separated
    from the southern continents (Gondwana)
  • at this time Gondwana itself was also breaking
    apart
  • By the end of the Mesozoic era (65 Mya), South
    America and Africa were widely separated, and
    many other patterns were emerging.

16
Positions of the continents have changed over
geologic timeMya 200 million years before)
17
Continental drift changed routes of dispersal
(units in millions of years when dispersal
routes were broken or created)
18
Consequences of Continental Drift
  • Details of continental drift have yet to be
    resolved, but implications for evolution of
    animals and plants are clear for example
  • the distributions of the flightless ratite birds
    (such as ostriches) are the results of connection
    between the southern continents that made up
    Gondwana
  • these birds are descended from a common Gondwanan
    ancestor
  • splitting of a widely distributed ancestral
    population by continental drift is called
    vicariance

19
Lineages of ratite birds separated by
fragmentation of Gondwana
20
Biogeographic Regions
  • The modern distributions of animals led Alfred
    Wallace to recognize six major biogeographic
    regions
  • these correspond to landmasses isolated millions
    of years ago by continental drift
  • over the course of this isolation, the animals
    and plants of these regions evolved independently
    and developed distinctive characteristics

21
Major zoogeographic regions of the earth based
on distribution of animals
22
Biogeographic Regions 1
  • Nearctic - North America
  • maintained connections to Palearctic for 100 My
  • Palearctic - Eurasia
  • shares many groups of plants and animals with
    Nearctic
  • Ethiopian - Africa
  • has a long history of isolation from the rest of
    the world

23
Biogeographic Regions 2
  • Australian - Australia
  • has a long history of isolation from the rest of
    the world
  • Oriental - Southeast Asia
  • isolated from rest of tropical world, but has
    some affinities to Palearctic, where a high
    percentage of trees are derived from tropical
    forests
  • Neotropical - South America
  • isolated from Nearctic until about 3 Mya
    (formation of isthmus of Panama)

24
Changes in Climate 1
  • The distribution of heat over the surface of the
    earth depends largely on circulation of the
    oceans
  • 50 to 30 Mya, polar regions were covered by
    oceans that extended to tropical regions,
    resulting in much warmer polar climates
  • after this time, drifting continents curtailed
    this circulation, resulting in a cooling and
    drying trend at high latitudes
  • result was greater stratification, during later
    Tertiary, of temperate and tropical biotas with
    distinctive adaptations

25
Changes in Climate 2
  • During the past 2 million years, gradual cooling
    of the earth gave way to violent oscillations in
    climate, the Ice Age or Pleistocene epoch
  • glacial advances drove temperate species
    southward and may have restricted tropical
    species to isolated refuges with moist conditions
  • migrations of forest trees in eastern North
    America have been well documented
  • after the last glacial retreat beginning 18,000
    years ago, a general pattern of reforestation
    ensued

26
Changes in Climate 3
  • Migrations of trees in eastern North America from
    18,000 years ago to present are known from pollen
    grains deposited in bogs and lakes
  • the compositions of communities shifted as
    species migrated across the landscape
  • in particular, the composition of forests during
    the past 18,000 years has
  • included combinations of species that do not
    occur today
  • lacked combinations of species that do occur at
    present

27
Catastrophes 1
  • The Mesozoic era (Cretaceous period) ended with a
    catastrophic disturbance 65 Mya
  • evidence points to collision of an asteroid with
    Earth that struck in shallow seas off the Yucatan
    Peninsula of Mexico
  • much of earths biomass was destroyed by massive
    tidal waves, fires, and ensuing darkness and cold
    temperatures
  • among the groups falling victim to this mass
    extinction were the dinosaurs
  • other groups (birds, mammals) survived and may
    have taken advantage of empty niches vacated by
    extinct groups

28
Catastrophes 2
  • Major catastrophes have occurred at intervals of
    10 to 100 millions of years
  • such events have disrupted ecosystems and changed
    the course of community development
  • thousands of years may be required for
    environmental conditions to return to normal
  • such events may also
  • eliminate species and thus reduce diversity
  • foster rapid evolutionary responses to new
    conditions
  • create opportunities for development of new
    biological associations

29
Convergence
  • Convergence is the process whereby unrelated
    species living under similar ecological
    conditions come to resemble one another more than
    their ancestors did
  • there are numerous examples of convergence
  • woodpecker-like birds that fill the woodpecker
    niche in many systems lacking woodpeckers
  • similarities of plants and animals of North and
    South American deserts
  • similar body forms of dolphins and penguins,
    which both resemble tuna, whose swimming
    lifestyle they share

30
convergence
31
Convergence is often incomplete.
  • Detailed study often turns up remarkable
    differences between plants and animals occupying
    superficially similar habitats
  • the ancient Monte Desert of South America lacks
    the bipedal, seed-eating, water-independent
    rodents of North America (kangaroo rats) and Asia
    (gerbils)
  • superficially similar lizards of Australia and
    North America differ in diet, optimal activity
    temperature, burrowing behavior, and annual cycle

32
Isolation has unique evolutionary consequences.
  • Many of the unique attributes of the reptile
    fauna of Australia may be related to poor soils
  • most Australian soils are old, deeply weathered,
    and have few nutrients
  • plants have low nutrient content and high levels
    of toxic substances
  • these plants support few insects
  • birds, which depend on insects, are not common
  • released from bird predation, lizards have
    proliferated in ways not possible elsewhere

33
Local Community Diversity
  • To what extent are community attributes, such as
    diversity, convergent?
  • do local processes determine numbers of
    coexisting species?
  • are numbers of species in communities occupying
    similar habitats independent of the regional
    species pool?
  • to what extent do regional differences in
    diversity also contribute to local diversity?

34
A Test for Local Control of Diversity
  • If regional processes influence local diversity,
    then local communities should sample regional
    species pools in the same proportion
  • this would result in a linear relationship
    between local and regional diversity
  • local control would result in saturation, beyond
    which increasing regional diversity would add
    nothing to local diversity
  • Available data support the idea that communities
    are open to invasion at any level of diversity
    when more species are present in the regional
    species pool
  • seen in data for fish communities in Africa and
    South America

35
Processes on many scales regulate biodiversity.
  • History and geographic position may influence
    diversity of an entire region and its local
    inhabitants
  • interactions of species within local habitats
    make up only half of the diversity equation!
  • for example, mangroves in the Indo-West Pacific
    region are far more diverse than mangroves in the
    Caribbean
  • both regions have roughly equal areas of a
    similar variety of mangrove habitats

36
Indo-West Pacific versus Caribbean Mangroves
  • Differences in diversity in mangroves of these
    regions appear related to several factors
  • plant taxa have invaded the mangrove habitat more
    frequently in the Indo-West Pacific region
  • fewer lineages in the Indo-West Pacific region
    appear to have suffered extinctions
  • wet conditions may have prevailed in Southeast
    Asia through much of the Tertiary, while adjacent
    terrestrial habitats in the Caribbean many have
    been dry during the latter Tertiary
  • fragmentation of the Indo-West Pacific habitats
    may have isolated populations and fostered
    speciation

37
Summary 1
  • Life first appeared several billion years ago,
    but modern forms appeared about 590 Mya, the
    point marking the beginning of the Paleozoic era.
  • More recent eras include the Mesozoic (beginning
    248 Mya) and Cenozoic (beginning 65 Mya).
  • Continental drift has altered climates and
    pathways of dispersal among the continents.

38
Summary 2
  • Animals and plants have evolved to some extent
    independently in each of six major biogeographic
    regions.
  • The climate of the earth cooled during the
    Cenozoic, leading to greater distinctions between
    tropical and temperate biotas.
  • Glacial advances during the Ice Age resulted in
    shifts in distribution and extinctions of many
    species of plants and animals.

39
Summary 3
  • Catastrophes have punctuated the development of
    life on earth, resulting in mass extinctions and
    new opportunities for surviving lineages.
  • Convergence is often observed in biota of similar
    but geographically isolated regions.
  • Nonconvergence in diversities of biotas from
    similar habitats indicates the role played by
    regional species pools in determining local
    diversity.
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