Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Climate-mediated diversification of turtles in the Cretaceous.


ABSTRACT: Chelonians are ectothermic, with an extensive fossil record preserved in diverse palaeoenvironmental settings: consequently, they represent excellent models for investigating organismal response to long-term environmental change. We present the first Mesozoic chelonian taxic richness curve, subsampled to remove geological/collection biases, and demonstrate that their palaeolatitudinal distributions were climate mediated. At the Jurassic/Cretaceous transition, marine taxa exhibit minimal diversity change, whereas non-marine diversity increases. A Late Cretaceous peak in 'global' non-marine subsampled richness coincides with high palaeolatitude occurrences and the Cretaceous thermal maximum (CTM): however, this peak also records increased geographic sampling and is not recovered in continental-scale diversity patterns. Nevertheless, a model-detrended richness series (insensitive to geographic sampling) also recovers a Late Cretaceous peak, suggesting genuine geographic range expansion among non-marine turtles during the CTM. Increased Late Cretaceous diversity derives from intensive North American sampling, but subsampling indicates that Early Cretaceous European/Asian diversity may have exceeded that of Late Cretaceous North America.

SUBMITTER: Nicholson DB 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4532850 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

altmetric image

Publications

Climate-mediated diversification of turtles in the Cretaceous.

Nicholson David B DB   Holroyd Patricia A PA   Benson Roger B J RBJ   Barrett Paul M PM  

Nature communications 20150803


Chelonians are ectothermic, with an extensive fossil record preserved in diverse palaeoenvironmental settings: consequently, they represent excellent models for investigating organismal response to long-term environmental change. We present the first Mesozoic chelonian taxic richness curve, subsampled to remove geological/collection biases, and demonstrate that their palaeolatitudinal distributions were climate mediated. At the Jurassic/Cretaceous transition, marine taxa exhibit minimal diversit  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

| S-EPMC7896334 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC8074880 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC298725 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC5301483 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC7863389 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC5882704 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC9924133 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC2610051 | biostudies-other
| S-EPMC4021230 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC4526650 | biostudies-literature