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Pleistocene and Holocene Epochs (Ice Age)

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Pleistocene and Holocene Epochs (Ice Age) Period of marked change in species despite short duration Recent event relates to current species – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pleistocene and Holocene Epochs (Ice Age)


1
Pleistocene and Holocene Epochs (Ice Age)
  • Period of marked change in species despite short
    duration
  • Recent event ? relates to current species
  • Traceable change through tree rings, animal and
    human middens, pollen, marine indicator species
  • Also important because event did not obliterate
    record of past events

2
Glaciation
3
Glaciation
Minor glaciation
Glaciation
4
Causes of Glaciation
  • Earlier glaciations caused by contiental drift
  • Continents 2 mya near/in current positions
  • Once thought Pleistocene glaciation caused by
    changes in solar output
  • Relatively stable solar output for last 590
    million years (Gates 1993)
  • Been linked to Milankovich cycles albedo

5
Eccentricity
Obliquity
Periodicity of 100,000 yr
Periodicity of 41,000 yr
Precession
Periodicity of 22,000 yr
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Extent of Glaciation
  • Most of Pleistocene and Holocene were glacial
    with short inter-glacial periods

Illinoian
Nebraskan
Wisconsin
Kansan
9
Extent of Glaciation
  • 80 of glacial ice in Northern Hemisphere
  • North America, Europe, Atlas Mtn. (NW Africa)
  • Southern Hemisphere
  • Chile and Argentina
  • Australia limited to Victorian Alps, Central
    Plateau of Tasmania
  • New Zealand Alps

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Climatic Effects
  • Sheer Size of glaciers area covered and height
    (2 3 km) changed wind and current patterns

Lake levels rose in SW US
14
Climatic Effects
  • Less fluctuation in temperature near glaciers

15
Climatic Effects
  • Temperatures lower away from equator. Tropic
    drier

How did tropical species maintain and even
increase diversity?
16
Sea Level Fluctuations
  • Rapid glacial and interglacial fluctuations
  • Sea level dropped 100 160 m during glacial
    periods
  • Created land bridges

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Retreat of Wisconsin glacier caused rapid rise in
sea level (plus compression of crust, causing sea
water to enter part of Great Lakes
21
Result some Atlantic species found in Great
Lakes, including several species of coastal plants
Range of seaside spurge (Ammophlia brevigulata)
note disjunct range
22
SHEER MASS - Weight of glaciers compressed crust!!
23
Biogeographic Responses to Glaciation
  • Biogeographic dynamics of Pleistocene triggered
    by
  • Changes in location, extent, and configuration of
    a species prime habitat
  • Changes in the nature of climatic and
    environmental zones
  • Formation and closing of dispersal routes

24
Biotas Response to Glaciation
  • Species were adapted to long-term conditions of
    relative stable climates, reponses were
  • Able to float with their optimal habitat as it
    shifted
  • Remained in in same location and adapted to new
    conditions
  • Range reduction and extinction
  • See Box 9.1

25
Biogeographic Responses to Glaciation
  • Some vegetative and marine zones increased they
    areal coverage
  • Steppes, savannahs ? open-canopied ecosystems
    (generally drier climate)
  • Closed-canopy ecosystems generally decreased
    (especially tropical rain forests
  • Changes greatest in mid-latiturdes (35 to 55)

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Elevational change in Andes. Rise and compression
29
Elevational change in SW US mountains
30
Change in upper elevational limit of forests
note timing of responses
31
Drier Climate recurring theme
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Variation in relative abundance of vegetative
communities since last glacial maximum. Note
variability over time and rapid change.
35
Barriers and Corridors
  • Changes in biota distribution not uniform
    latitudinally
  • North America many corridors
  • Mississippi River
  • Rocky and Appalachian Mountains

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Barriers and Corridors
  • Changes in biota distribution not uniform
    latitudinally
  • Eurasia corridors
  • Ural, Carpathian, and Atlay mountains
  • Rocky and Appalachian mountains
  • Eurasia barriers
  • Mediterranean Sea
  • Caucasus, Alps, and Pyrenees mountains

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Corridors and Dispersal
  • Lowering of elevation of montane vegetative zones
    as mechanisms of dispersal cross to other
    mountains and mesic lowlands
  • Oceanic zonal patterns also changed (Fig. 9.12)
    even though open ocean temperature change smaller
    (2 3C)
  • Stenothermal species had potential to move to
    opposite poles (Fig. 9.25)

44
Aquatic Ecosystems
  • Glaciers are major lake builders
  • Seen as aftermath of glaciation
  • Kettle lakes, moraine lakes, paternoster.
  • Glacial lakes
  • Meltwater retained by ice dams
  • When dams break ? large mass freshwater into
    shallow seas, carve out river valleys

45
  • Lake Agassiz
  • Released 163,000 km3 in Tyrrel Sea (Hudson Bay),
    Atlantic Ocean
  • Also down Glacial River Warren (now Minnesota and
    Mississippi Rivers)

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Wet Aridlands Pluvial Lakes
  • Formed in what are now deserts
  • Large freshwater or saline lakes
  • Caused by low evaporation high precipitation
  • Typically formed in broad basins between mountain
    ranges
  • Lake Bonneville remnants are saline lakes
    (Great Salt Lake)

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Refugia
  • Safe zones or habitats, offered areas where ice
    did not cover, even in the area of the ice sheet
  • Haffers Pleistocene refugium hypothesis
  • Fragmentation of Amazonian rainforest by
    precipitation levels
  • Lead to isolation and divergence of species and
    subspecies
  • New model inundation of basin by 100 m rise in
    sea level and Amazon islands

50
Emphasis is on distribution of subspecies and
number of endemic species
51
Nunatuks
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Refugia and Endemics
55
Glaciation and Extinctions
  • Plants most extinctions at the onset of glacial
    events
  • Species persistence by
  • Disperse with climatic zones
  • Refugia and dispersal
  • Adaptation to new conditions

56
Glaciation and Extinctions
  • Marine Invertebrates also most extinctions at
    the onset of glacial events
  • Causes
  • Stenothermal species
  • Limited ability to disperse (non-planktonic
    larvae)

57
Glaciation and Extinctions
  • Terrestrial vertebrates pattern less clear
  • Overkill hypothesis impact of humans as they
    expanded their range. Would lead to loss of
    large herbivores as well as their associated
    predators and scavengers
  • Size-Space
  • Climate many of extinctions of all
    sized-terrestrial vertebrates was low and
    constant until the late Wisconsin

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Australia Black extinct during
Pleistocene/early Holocene Shaded extinct or
endangered after European colonization White
Extant, non-endangered species
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