Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panamá, 0843-03092, Republic of Panamá
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2014 Feb;89(1):148-72. doi: 10.1111/brv.12048. Epub 2013 Jul 19.
About 3 million years ago (Ma), the Isthmus of Panama joined the Americas, forming a land bridge over which inhabitants of each America invaded the other-the Great American Biotic Interchange. These invasions transformed land ecosystems in South and Middle America. Humans invading from Asia over 12000 years ago killed most mammals over 44 kg, again transforming tropical American ecosystems. As a sea barrier, the isthmus induced divergent environmental change off its two coasts-creating contrasting ecosystems through differential extinction and diversification. Approximately 65 Ma invading marsupials and ungulates of North American ancestry, and xenarthrans of uncertain provenance replaced nearly all South America's non-volant mammals. There is no geological evidence for a land bridge at that time. Together with rodents and primates crossing from Africa 42 to 30 Ma, South America's mammals evolved in isolation until the interchange's first heralds less than 10 Ma. Its carnivores were ineffective marsupials. Meanwhile, North America was invaded by more competitive Eurasian mammals. The Americas had comparable expanses of tropical forest 55 Ma; later, climate change confined North American tropical forest to a far smaller area. When the isthmus formed, North American carnivores replaced their marsupial counterparts. Although invaders crossed in both directions, North American mammals spread widely, diversified greatly, and steadily replaced South American open-country counterparts, unused to effective predators. Invading South American mammals were less successful. South America's birds, bats, and smaller rainforest mammals, equally isolated, mostly survived invasion. Its vegetation, enriched by many overseas invaders, remained intact. This vegetation resists herbivory effectively. When climate permitted, South America's rainforest, with its bats, birds and mammals, spread to Mexico. Present-day tropical American vegetation is largely zoned by trade-offs between exploiting well-watered settings versus surviving droughts, exploiting fertile versus coping with poor soil, and exploiting lowland warmth versus coping with cooler altitudes. At the start of the Miocene, a common marine biota extended from Trinidad to Ecuador and western Mexico, which evolved in isolation from the Indo-Pacific until the Pleistocene. The seaway between the Americas began shoaling over 12 Ma. About 10 Ma the land bridge was briefly near-complete, allowing some interchange of land mammals between the continents. By 7 Ma, the rising sill had split deeper-water populations. Sea temperature, salinity and sedimentary carbon content had begun to increase in the Southern Caribbean, but not the Pacific. By 4 Ma, the seaway's narrowing began to extinguish Caribbean upwellings. By 2 Ma, upwellings remained only along Venezuela; Caribbean plankton, suspension-feeding molluscs and their predators had declined sharply, largely replaced by bottom-dwelling corals and calcareous algae and magnificent coral reefs. Closing the seaway extinguished the Eastern Pacific's reef corals (successors recolonized from the Indo-Pacific 6000 years ago), whereas many molluscs of productive waters that once thrived in the Caribbean now survive only in the Eastern Pacific. The present-day productive Eastern Pacific, with few, small coral reefs and a plankton-based ecosystem contrasts with the Caribbean, whose clear water favours expansive coral reefs and bottom-dwelling primary producers. These ecosystems reflect the trade-off between fast growth and effective defence with attendant longevity. Overfishing with new technologies during the last few centuries, however, has caused population crashes of ever-smaller marine animals, devastating Caribbean ecosystems.
大约 300 万年前(Ma),巴拿马地峡将美洲连接起来,形成了一个连接两大陆的陆桥,使得来自每个美洲的居民入侵到另一个美洲——大美洲生物大交换。这些入侵改变了南、中美洲的陆地生态系统。12000 多年前,从亚洲入侵的人类杀死了大多数体重超过 44 公斤的哺乳动物,再次改变了热带美洲的生态系统。作为一个海障,地峡在其两侧海岸引起了不同的环境变化——通过不同的灭绝和多样化创造了对比鲜明的生态系统。大约 65Ma 时,来自北美的有袋类和有蹄类动物以及来源不明的异关节动物取代了南美的几乎所有非飞行动物。当时没有地质证据表明存在陆桥。与 42 到 30Ma 期间从非洲穿越而来的啮齿动物和灵长类动物一起,南美洲的哺乳动物在隔离中进化,直到 10Ma 左右才有了第一次大交换的先驱。其肉食动物是无效的有袋动物。与此同时,北美的竞争更激烈的欧亚哺乳动物也在入侵。55Ma 时,美洲拥有可比的热带森林面积;后来,气候变化将北美的热带森林面积缩小到一个小得多的区域。当地峡形成时,北美的肉食动物取代了它们的有袋动物。尽管侵略者双向穿越,但北美的哺乳动物广泛传播,多样化程度很高,并稳步取代了不习惯有效捕食者的南美开阔地动物。入侵南美的哺乳动物则不太成功。南美的鸟类、蝙蝠和较小的雨林哺乳动物,同样孤立无援,大多在入侵中幸存下来。其植被因许多海外入侵物种而丰富,保持完整。这种植被能有效地抵御食草动物。当气候允许时,南美的雨林,连同它的蝙蝠、鸟类和哺乳动物,会蔓延到墨西哥。现在的热带美洲植被主要是通过在利用水资源充足的环境与应对干旱、利用肥沃的土地与应对贫瘠的土地、利用低地的温暖与应对更高的海拔之间的权衡来划分的。在中新世早期,一个共同的海洋生物群从特立尼达延伸到厄瓜多尔和墨西哥西部,它与印度洋-太平洋地区隔离进化,直到更新世。美洲之间的海峡开始变浅超过 12Ma。大约 10Ma 时,陆桥几乎完全形成,允许两个大陆之间的一些陆地哺乳动物进行交换。到 7Ma 时,上升的海脊已经将深水种群分裂开来。加勒比海的海水温度、盐度和沉积碳含量开始增加,但太平洋没有。4Ma 时,海峡的变窄开始使加勒比海的上升流熄灭。到 2Ma 时,上升流仅沿委内瑞拉存在;加勒比海浮游生物、滤食性软体动物及其捕食者急剧减少,主要被底栖珊瑚和钙质藻类以及壮丽的珊瑚礁所取代。海峡的关闭使东太平洋的珊瑚礁灭绝(从印度洋-太平洋地区的珊瑚礁在 6000 年前重新殖民),而曾经在加勒比海大量繁殖的许多海洋软体动物现在仅在东太平洋存活。现在,东太平洋生产力较高,珊瑚礁较少,以浮游生物为基础的生态系统与加勒比海形成鲜明对比,加勒比海的清澈海水有利于广阔的珊瑚礁和底栖初级生产者。这些生态系统反映了快速生长和有效防御与随之而来的长寿之间的权衡。然而,在过去的几个世纪里,新技术的过度捕捞导致越来越小的海洋动物种群崩溃,破坏了加勒比海的生态系统。