Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Vanderbilt University, 5726 Stevenson Center, Nashville, TN 37240, USA; Evolutionary Studies Initiative, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA; Senckenberg Museum of Natural History, Frankfurt 60325, Germany.
University of Oxford, Department of Earth Sciences, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3AN, UK.
Trends Ecol Evol. 2022 Oct;37(10):851-860. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2022.05.005. Epub 2022 Jun 9.
Geographic ranges are a fundamental unit of biogeography and macroecology. Increasingly, paleontologists and ecologists alike are reconstructing geographic ranges of species from fossils, in order to understand the long-term processes governing biogeographic and macroevolutionary patterns. As these reconstructions have become increasingly common, uncertainty has arisen over the equivalency of paleo-ranges and modern ranges. Here, we argue geographic ranges are time-averaged at all temporal scales, and reflect the biotic and abiotic processes operating across the equivalent range of time and space scales. This conceptual framework integrates the study of geographic ranges reconstructed using modern and ancient data, and highlights the potential for ranges to illuminate processes responsible for diversity patterns over intervals spanning days to tens of millions of years of Earth history.
地理范围是生物地理学和宏观生态学的基本单位。越来越多的古生物学家和生态学家都在从化石中重建物种的地理范围,以了解控制生物地理和宏观进化模式的长期过程。随着这些重建变得越来越普遍,古范围和现代范围的等效性出现了不确定性。在这里,我们认为地理范围在所有时间尺度上都是时间平均的,反映了在等效的时间和空间尺度上运作的生物和非生物过程。这个概念框架整合了使用现代和古代数据重建地理范围的研究,并强调了范围在跨越数天到数千万年的地球历史的时间段内阐明多样性模式的潜在过程。