Moroz Molly, Jackson Illiam S C, Ramirez Daniel, Kemp Melissa E
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2021 Mar 15;9:e10856. doi: 10.7717/peerj.10856. eCollection 2021.
How species will respond to ongoing and future climate change is one of the most important questions facing biodiversity scientists today. The fossil record provides unparalleled insight into past ecological and evolutionary responses to climate change, but the resource remains virtually untapped for many organisms. We use geometric morphometrics and a 25,000 year fossil record to quantify changes in body size and mandible shape through time and across climate regimes for two bat species present in Quaternary paleontological deposits of central Texas: , a bat distributed throughout the Southwestern US and Mexico that is still found in central Texas today, and , a bat widely distributed throughout North America that has been extirpated in central Texas. Because of ecogeographic rules like Bergmann's rule, which posits that endotherms are larger in colder environments, we hypothesized that both species were larger during cooler time intervals. Additionally, we hypothesized that both species would show variation in dental morphology across the studied sequence as a response to climate change. While we found a decrease in centroid size-a proxy for --body size-through time for both species, we could not establish a clear relationship between centroid size and temperature alone. However, we did find that specimens from drier environments were significantly larger than those from wetter ones. Furthermore, we found significant dental shape variation between environments reflecting different temperature levels for both species. Yet only exhibited significant variation between environments of varying precipitation levels. This result was surprising because present-day populations of are highly variable across both temperature and precipitation gradients. We determined that the morphological change experienced by through time, and between warmer and cooler temperatures, was associated with the coronoid process, condylar process, and the mandibular symphysis. These parts play a pivotal role in bite force, so changes in these features might relate to changes in diet. We show that long-term datasets derived from fossil material provide invaluable insight not only into the validity of ecogeographic rules, but also into the adaptive capacities of extant taxa when faced with environmental changes. Our results highlight diverging responses to a variety of climate factors that are relevant to consider in biodiversity research given ongoing global change.
物种将如何应对当前及未来的气候变化是当今生物多样性科学家面临的最重要问题之一。化石记录为过去对气候变化的生态和进化反应提供了无与伦比的见解,但对于许多生物来说,这一资源实际上仍未得到充分利用。我们运用几何形态测量学和一份长达25000年的化石记录,来量化德克萨斯州中部第四纪古生物沉积物中存在的两种蝙蝠物种随时间推移以及在不同气候条件下身体大小和下颌形状的变化:一种蝙蝠分布于美国西南部和墨西哥,如今在德克萨斯州中部仍能发现;另一种蝙蝠曾广泛分布于北美,但在德克萨斯州中部已灭绝。由于像伯格曼法则这样的生态地理规则,即认为恒温动物在较冷环境中体型更大,我们推测这两种物种在较冷的时间段体型都更大。此外,我们推测这两种物种在整个研究序列中牙齿形态都会因气候变化而出现变化。虽然我们发现两种物种的质心大小(身体大小的一个指标)都随时间下降,但仅质心大小与温度之间无法建立明确的关系。然而,我们确实发现来自较干燥环境的标本明显大于来自较湿润环境的标本。此外,我们发现两种物种在反映不同温度水平的环境之间存在显著的牙齿形状差异。然而,只有在不同降水水平的环境之间表现出显著差异。这一结果令人惊讶,因为如今该物种的种群在温度和降水梯度上都高度可变。我们确定,随着时间推移以及在较温暖和较寒冷温度之间,该物种经历的形态变化与冠状突、髁突以及下颌联合有关。这些部位在咬合力中起关键作用,所以这些特征的变化可能与饮食变化有关。我们表明,源自化石材料的长期数据集不仅能为生态地理规则的有效性提供宝贵见解,还能洞察现存分类群在面对环境变化时的适应能力。我们的结果凸显了对各种气候因素的不同反应,鉴于当前的全球变化,这些因素在生物多样性研究中是需要考虑的。