Data from: Marine life in a greenhouse world: cephalopod biodiversity and biogeography during the early Late Cretaceous
Two end-member models are proposed to explain marine biotic responses to greenhouse conditions. Global warming and increasing sea level may: (1) promote dispersal of marine species, leading to larger geographic ranges and decreased speciation and biodiversity, or (2) form isolated epicontinental bas...
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Zusammenfassung: | Two end-member models are proposed to explain marine biotic responses to
greenhouse conditions. Global warming and increasing sea level may: (1)
promote dispersal of marine species, leading to larger geographic ranges
and decreased speciation and biodiversity, or (2) form isolated
epicontinental basins that host endemic radiations, leading to smaller
geographic ranges and increased speciation and biodiversity. The
Cenomanian–Turonian (C–T) interval, marked by greenhouse warming, sea
level rise, ocean anoxia, and biotic turnover, presents an opportunity to
test these two end-member models. In particular, how cephalopods responded
to these global changes has not been clear. A global database of 7,262
cephalopod occurrences was used to evaluate biodiversity changes through
the C–T interval. Both species- and genus-level diversity peaked in the
Late Cenomanian. The global diversity drop across the C/T boundary was
modest; rather, diversity was low during the Middle Cenomanian and Middle
Turonian, times of brief cooling. Regional variations in diversity
responses may reflect the degree and timing of environmental perturbations
within different oceanographic settings. Surprisingly, cephalopod faunas
in the European Platform, Western Interior, and South Atlantic all shifted
equatorward across the C/T boundary, whereas other regions saw no change
in latitudinal distributions. Global generic geographic ranges did not
change through the C–T interval, but the percentage of cosmopolitan genera
did increase significantly across the C/T, both globally and within the
Western Interior and Europe, whereas cosmopolitans dropped in the Pacific
and South Atlantic. Neither end-member model for biodiversity change in a
greenhouse world is supported for C–T cephalopods, as diversity increased
without an associated increase in geographic range. It may be that sea
level rise and global warming led to both endemic radiations in
epicontinental basins and an increase in cosmopolitan taxa in some
regions, demonstrating the importance of combining global and regional
scale analyses. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.126dg |