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Transcript of Historical Biogeography CH 7. Current Distribution Result of the interaction of: – Early history...
![Page 1: Historical Biogeography CH 7. Current Distribution Result of the interaction of: – Early history and place of origin – Fragmentation of continents – Climactic.](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110322/56649d125503460f949e6312/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Historical Biogeography
CH 7
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Current Distribution
• Result of the interaction of:– Early history and place of origin– Fragmentation of continents– Climactic changes during Cenozoic– Cooling and eventual ice age in Pleistocene– Mass extinctions and adaptive radiations– Land Bridges
• Bering• Greenland
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I. Deep Time PerspectiveA. 4 Zoic Eras B. Overview of Major EventsC. Historic Biogeography
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Table 25-1b
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The rise and fall of dominant groups reflect continental drift, mass extinctions, and adaptive radiations
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SouthAmerica
Pangaea
Mill
ions
of y
ears
ago
65.5
135
Mes
ozoi
c
251
Pale
ozoi
c
Gondwana
Laurasia
Eurasia
IndiaAfrica
AntarcticaAustralia
North America
Madagascar
Ceno
zoic
Present
Continental Drift
• At three points in time, the land masses of Earth have formed a supercontinent: 1.1 billion, 600 million, and 250 million years ago
• Earth’s continents move slowly over the underlying hot mantle through the process of continental drift
• Oceanic and continental plates can collide, separate, or slide past each other
• Interactions between plates cause the formation of mountains and islands, and earthquakes
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Mass Extinctions
• The fossil record shows that most species that have ever lived are now extinct
• At times, the rate of extinction has increased dramatically and caused a mass extinction
• In each of the five mass extinction events, more than 50% of Earth’s species became extinct
Dimetrodon Hallucigenia
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Fig. 25-14
Tota
l exti
nctio
n ra
te(f
amili
es p
er m
illio
n ye
ars)
:
Time (millions of years ago)
Num
ber o
f fam
ilies
:
CenozoicMesozoicPaleozoicE O S D C P Tr J
542
0
488 444 416 359 299 251 200 145
EraPeriod
5
C P N
65.5
0
0
200
100
300
400
500
600
700
800
15
10
20
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Adaptive Radiations
• Adaptive radiation is the evolution of many new species adapted from a common ancestor upon introduction to new environmental opportunities (new niches)
• Occurs via:– Evolution of novelty (i.e., seeds)– After a mass extinction (i.e., mammals) – Formation of new land (i.g. islands)– Piggyback on other organisms (insect radiations follow flowering
plants)
BASICALLY, any time many new niches (ecological livelihoods) are available, there is opportunity for adaptive radiation.
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Table 25-1a
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Table 25-1aIII. Multicellular Life - Neoproterozoic
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Table 25-1a
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V. First Life on LandVI. Conquest of Land
Challenges:structural supportdehydrationreproduction
Solutions:exoskeleton, lungs in animalswhat about plants?
cuticle, stomata, vascular tissue,pollen – not all at once
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Table 25-1a
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Massive extinction – 250myafollowed by adaptive radiation
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Table 25-1b
SouthAmerica
Pangaea
Mill
ions
of y
ears
ago
65.5
135
Mes
ozoi
c
251
Pale
ozoi
c
Gondwana
Laurasia
Eurasia
IndiaAfrica
AntarcticaAustralia
North America
Madagascar
Ceno
zoic
Present
VIII. Emerging Modern LineagesTriassic/Jurassic:
global warming, arid Pangaea interior, mountain formation
Reptiles loved it!
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Table 25-1b
SouthAmerica
Pangaea
Mill
ions
of y
ears
ago
65.5
135
Mes
ozoi
c
251
Pale
ozoi
c
Gondwana
Laurasia
Eurasia
IndiaAfrica
AntarcticaAustralia
North America
Madagascar
Ceno
zoic
Present
Extinction
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Fig. 25-17
Millions of years ago
Monotremes(5 species)
250 150 100200 50
ANCESTRALCYNODONT
0
Marsupials(324 species)
Eutherians(placentalmammals;5,010 species)
Ancestralmammal
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SouthAmerica
Pangaea
Mil
lio
ns
of
year
s ag
o
65.5
135
Mes
ozo
ic
251
Pal
eozo
ic
Gondwana
Laurasia
Eurasia
IndiaAfrica
AntarcticaAustralia
North Americ
a
Madagascar
Cen
ozo
ic
Present
Mountain ranges: Himalayans , Rockies (Eocene), Sierra Nevada (Miocene), Cascades, Coast ranges (late Miocene)
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Great American Interchange
Panama Isthmus formed 3 mya
Panama bridge26 genera S12 went NTapirs/llamas went extinct in N Am, so disjunct w/Asian