Simon Fraser University evolutionary biologists Bruce Archibald and Rolf
Mathewes, and Brandon University biologist David Greenwood, have
discovered that modern tropical mountains' diversity patterns extended
up into Canada about 50 million years ago.
Their findings confirm an influential theory about change in modern
species diversity across mountains, and provide evidence that global
biodiversity was greater in ancient times than now. The scientific
journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology has published their research.
About 45 years ago, an evolutionary biologist at the University of
Pennsylvania theorized that change in species from site to site across
mountain ranges in the tropics should be greater than in temperate
latitudes.
Daniel Janzen reasoned that the great difference between summer and
winter in temperate latitudes (high seasonality) offers a wide window to
migrate across mountainous regions. The small difference in the tropics
(low seasonality) allows a very narrow opportunity, annually.
Consequently, communities across tropical mountains should have fewer of
the same species. Many studies examining modern communities support
this theory.
Archibald, Mathewes and Greenwood realized that fossil beds across a
thousand kilometres of the ancient mountains of British Columbia and
Washington provided a unique lens through which to deepen evaluation of
this theory.
Fifty million years ago, when these fossil beds were laid down, the
world had low seasonality outside of the tropics, right to the poles.
Because of this, if Janzen's theory is right, the pattern of
biodiversity that he described in modern tropical mountains should have
extended well into higher latitudes.
"We found that insect species changed greatly across British
Columbia's and Washington State's ancient mountain ranges, like in the
modern tropics," Archibald says, "exactly as Janzen's seasonality
hypothesis predicted.
This implies that it's the particular seasonality now found in the
modern tropics, not where that climate is situated globally, that
affects this biodiversity pattern." He adds: "Sometimes it helps to look
to the ancient past to better understand how things work today."
The findings also bolster the idea that ancient Earth was a much more diverse world than now with many more species.
Source: Sciencedaily

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