Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20013, USA. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37240, USA.
Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20013, USA. Departments of Mammalogy and Paleontology, Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Science. 2015 Apr 17;348(6232):aaa3716. doi: 10.1126/science.aaa3716.
Many top consumers in today's oceans are marine tetrapods, a collection of lineages independently derived from terrestrial ancestors. The fossil record illuminates their transitions from land to sea, yet these initial invasions account for a small proportion of their evolutionary history. We review the history of marine invasions that drove major changes in anatomy, physiology, and ecology over more than 250 million years. Many innovations evolved convergently in multiple clades, whereas others are unique to individual lineages. The evolutionary arcs of these ecologically important clades are framed against the backdrop of mass extinctions and regime shifts in ocean ecosystems. Past and present human disruptions to marine tetrapods, with cascading impacts on marine ecosystems, underscore the need to link macroecology with evolutionary change.
如今海洋中的顶级消费者大多是海洋四足动物,这是一组从陆地祖先中独立演化而来的谱系。化石记录揭示了它们从陆地到海洋的过渡,但这些最初的入侵只占它们进化历史的一小部分。我们回顾了海洋入侵的历史,这些入侵驱动了超过 2.5 亿年的解剖学、生理学和生态学的重大变化。许多创新在多个分支中趋同进化,而另一些则是个别谱系所特有的。这些生态重要分支的进化轨迹是在海洋生态系统大灭绝和生态系统更替的背景下形成的。过去和现在人类对海洋四足动物的干扰,对海洋生态系统产生了级联影响,这突显了将宏观生态学与进化变化联系起来的必要性。