On the role of tectonics in stimulating the Cretaceous diversification of mammals

Mammals rose to prominence in terrestrial ecosystems after the Cretaceous–Paleogene mass extinction, but the mammalian lineages characteristic of Paleogene faunas began their evolutionary and ecological diversification in the Late Cretaceous, stimulated by the rise of angiosperms (flowering plants)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth-science reviews 2024-01, Vol.248, p.104630, Article 104630
Hauptverfasser: Weaver, Lucas N., Kelson, Julia R., Holder, Robert M., Niemi, Nathan A., Badgley, Catherine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mammals rose to prominence in terrestrial ecosystems after the Cretaceous–Paleogene mass extinction, but the mammalian lineages characteristic of Paleogene faunas began their evolutionary and ecological diversification in the Late Cretaceous, stimulated by the rise of angiosperms (flowering plants) according to the preeminent hypothesis. The Cretaceous rise of mammals is part of a larger expansion in biodiversity on land that has been termed the Cretaceous (or Angiosperm) Terrestrial Revolution, but the mechanisms underlying its initiation remain opaque. Here, we review data from the fossil and rock records of western North America—due to its relatively continuous fossil record and complete chronology of mountain-building events—to explore the role that tectonism might have played in catalyzing the rise of modern-aspect terrestrial biodiversity, especially that of mammals and angiosperms. We highlight that accelerated increases in mammal and angiosperm species richness in the Late Cretaceous, ca. 100–75 Ma, track the acceleration of tectonic processes that formed the North American Cordillera and occurred during the ‘middle-Cretaceous greenhouse’ climate. This rapid increase in both mammal and angiosperm diversity also occurred during the zenith of Western Interior Seaway transgression, a period when the availability of lowland habitats was at its minimum, and oscillatory transgression-regression cycles would have frequently forced upland range shifts among lowland populations. These changes to both landscapes and climates have all been linked to an abrupt, global tectonic-plate ‘reorganization’ that occurred ca. 100 Ma. That mammals and angiosperms both increased in species richness during this interval does not appear to be a taphonomic artifact—some of the largest spikes in diversity occur when the available mammal-bearing fossil localities are sparse. Noting that mountainous regions are engines for generating biodiversity, especially in warm climates, we propose that the Cretaceous/Angiosperm Terrestrial Revolution was ultimately catalyzed by accelerated tectonism and enhanced via cascading changes to landscapes and climate. In the fossil record of individual basins across western North America, we predict that (1) increases in mammalian diversity through the Late Cretaceous should be positively correlated with rates of tectonic uplift, which we infer to be a proxy for topographic relief, and are attended by increased climate heterogeneity, (2) the div
ISSN:0012-8252
1872-6828
DOI:10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104630