Journal article icon

Journal article

Climatic shifts drove major contractions in avian latitudinal distributions throughout the Cenozoic

Abstract:
Many higher level avian clades are restricted to Earth’s lower latitudes, leading to historical biogeographic reconstructions favoring a Gondwanan origin of crown birds and numerous deep subclades. However, several such “tropical-restricted” clades (TRCs) are represented by stem-lineage fossils well outside the ranges of their closest living relatives, often on northern continents. To assess the drivers of these geographic disjunctions, we combined ecological niche modeling, paleoclimate models, and the early Cenozoic fossil record to examine the influence of climatic change on avian geographic distributions over the last ∼56 million years. By modeling the distribution of suitable habitable area through time, we illustrate that most Paleogene fossil-bearing localities would have been suitable for occupancy by extant TRC representatives when their stem-lineage fossils were deposited. Potentially suitable habitat for these TRCs is inferred to have become progressively restricted toward the tropics throughout the Cenozoic, culminating in relatively narrow circumtropical distributions in the present day. Our results are consistent with coarse-scale niche conservatism at the clade level and support a scenario whereby climate change over geological timescales has largely dictated the geographic distributions of many major avian clades. The distinctive modern bias toward high avian diversity at tropical latitudes for most hierarchical taxonomic levels may therefore represent a relatively recent phenomenon, overprinting a complex biogeographic history of dramatic geographic range shifts driven by Earth’s changing climate, variable persistence, and intercontinental dispersal. Earth’s current climatic trajectory portends a return to a megathermal state, which may dramatically influence the geographic distributions of many range-restricted extant clades.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions


Access Document


Files:
Publisher copy:
10.1073/pnas.1903866116

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Earth Sciences
Oxford college:
St Hugh's College
Role:
Author


Publisher:
National Academy of Sciences
Journal:
PNAS More from this journal
Volume:
116
Issue:
26
Pages:
12895-12900
Publication date:
2019-06-10
Acceptance date:
2019-05-07
DOI:
ISSN:
0027-8424


Pubs id:
pubs:1010828
UUID:
uuid:d186151e-d10e-4b1d-8b6e-1d63733d1381
Local pid:
pubs:1010828
Source identifiers:
1010828
Deposit date:
2019-06-11

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP