Department of Geology and Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045-7613, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2011 Mar 7;278(1706):681-9. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2010.1617. Epub 2010 Sep 15.
One way the effects of both ecology and environment on species can be observed in the fossil record is as changes in geographical distribution and range size. The prevalence of competitive interactions and species replacements in the fossil record has long been investigated and many evolutionary perspectives, including those of Darwin, have emphasized the importance of competitive interactions that ultimately lead one species to replace another. However, evidence for such phenomena in the fossil record is not always manifest. Here we use new quantitative analytical techniques based on Geographical Information Systems and PaleoGIS tectonic reconstructions to consider this issue in greater detail. The abundant, well-preserved fossil marine vertebrates of the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway of North America provide the component data for this study. Statistical analysis of distributional and range size changes in taxa confirms earlier ideas that the relative frequency of competitive replacement in the fossil record is limited to non-existent. It appears that typically, environmental gradients played the primary role in determining species distributions, with competitive interactions playing a more minor role.
可以从地理分布和范围大小的变化来观察生态和环境对物种的影响,这是化石记录的一个方面。长期以来,人们一直在研究化石记录中竞争相互作用和物种替代的普遍性,包括达尔文在内的许多进化观点都强调了竞争相互作用的重要性,这些竞争相互作用最终导致一个物种取代另一个物种。然而,化石记录中并不总是明显存在这样的现象。在这里,我们使用基于地理信息系统和古地理构造重建的新定量分析技术来更详细地考虑这个问题。北美西部内陆海道晚白垩世丰富、保存完好的海洋脊椎动物化石为这项研究提供了组成数据。对分类单元分布和范围大小变化的统计分析证实了早期的观点,即在化石记录中,竞争替代的相对频率是不存在的。似乎环境梯度通常在决定物种分布方面起着主要作用,而竞争相互作用则起着次要作用。