Title: The Roots of Biodiversity:
1The Roots of Biodiversity An Investigation of
Jablonski, Roy, and Valentines Out of the
Tropics Evolutionary Dynamics of the Latitudinal
Diversity Gradient Elizabeth Carlton December
7, 2006
2The Issue
- The Latitudinal Diversity Gradient
- Increase in the number of species from the poles
to the tropics - Over 10 times more species in the tropics than
the arctic - Scientists are still trying to figure out what
causes this gradient - Hillebrand Study (2004)
- Performed meta-analysis searching abstracts with
search terms latitudinal gradient, latitude
AND diversity, and latitude AND species
richness - Analyzed 232 studies each contained different
variables relating to latitudinal gradient (ex.
Thermoregulation, habitat type, longitude) - Found general trend that latitudinal diversity
gradient occurs in almost all groups of
organisms, however, the strength of the gradients
differ based upon the variable examined
3Why do we find this gradient?
The Issue
- Two Hypotheses
- -The tropics are a cradle of biodiversity
- -The tropics are a museum of biodiversity
- The Formula for Diversity
- Diversity
- Origination Rates - Extinction Rates Changes in
Geographic Distributions (O) (E) (I for
Immigration)
4The Cradle Hypotheses
High biodiversity is attributed to high
speciation rates in tropical regions
Origination Rates higher in tropics than in
extratropical regions Extinction Rates and
Immigration Rates are equal in tropics and
extratropics
5The Museum Hypotheses
Tropics gradually accumulate species over time
but maintain more biodiversity because of low
extinction rates
Extinction Rates lower in tropics than in
extratropical regions Origination Rates and
Immigration Rates are equal in tropics and
extratropics
6Methods
- The Organism
- Marine Bivalves
- (Prior to this study, Jablonski determined
evolutionary relationships of bivalves) - Why are these organisms particularly good to use
for this study? - Strong LDG for both species and genera- can do
large scale paleontological analysis - Fossil record of this organism is rich and
densely sampled - Bivalves are found in the ocean at all latitudes
7Methods
- The Evolutionary Tool of Choice
- THE FOSSIL RECORD
- Used a revised Sepkoskis Compendium to identify
all living genera of bivalves that originated
within the past 11 million years - Used museum collections and primary literature to
determine where each taxon first occurred
(tropics or extratropics) - Used these same resources (Compendium, museums,
and primary literature) to estimate tropical and
extratropical extinctions - Examined species in late Miocene, Pliocene, and
Pleistocene ages up to the present?11-million
year time interval - Less sampling has been done in tropics as
compared to extratropics (may have effect on
results)
8Results
- ORIGINATION 11 Million Year Period
- Tropical First Occurrences of Marine Bivalve
Genera 117 - Extratropical First Occurences of Marine Bivalve
Genera 46 - OTgtOE
Number of Taxa first occurring in Tropical vs.
Extratropical Regions
Pleistocene (11,550 to 1.8 million ybp)
Pliocene (1.8 to 5.3 million ybp)
Late Miocene (5.3 to 11 million ybp)
9Results
- EXTINCTION 11 Million Year Period
- Number of Exclusively Tropical Genera
Extinctions 30 - Number of Extratropical and Cosmopolitan (widely
distributed over the globe) Genera Extinctions
107 - ET?EE
- Most inconclusive of the three variables because
of undersampling in the tropical regions
10Results
- IMMIGRATION Tropics are bounded between 25oN
and 25oS latitude - ?75 of taxa that first occur in tropics occur
in extratropics today - Only 2 of the ?75 taxa have completely left
the tropics - Found that average age of living bivalve genera
in tropics is lower than the average age of
extratropical genera (tropics harbor young and
old taxa- extratropics harbor older taxa) - ITltIE
Modern Poleward Limits of Taxa With Tropical
Origins
Pleistocene (11,550 to 1.8 million ybp)
Pliocene (1.8 to 5.3 million ybp)
Late Miocene (5.3 to 11 million ybp)
11The Out of the Tropics Model
The Tropics are a Cradle and a Museum
Origination Rates higher in Tropics than in
Extratropics Extinction Rates lower in Tropics
than in Extratropics
GENERA ARE ORIGINATING IN TROPICS AND IMMIGRATING
TO EXTRATROPICAL REGIONS
12What Does This Mean For Society?
- 75 of modern day genera of bivalves originated
in the tropics and spread outward into
extratropical regions - Tropics are the center of biodiversity for the
earth - Destruction of tropics means destruction of
biodiversity in higher latitudes - By destroying our tropical habitats, we are
subsequently destroying our own habitats - Conservation of biodiversity in the tropics is a
global issue
13References
- Hillebrand, Helmut. "On the Generality of the
Latitudinal Diversity Gradient." The American
Naturalist 163 (2004) 192-211. - Jablonski, David, Kaustuv Roy, and James W.
Valentine. "Out of the Tropics Evolutionary
Dynamics of the Latitudinal Diversity Gradient."
Science 314 (6 October 2006) 102-106. - Sanders, Roger. "Tropics are Source of Much of
World's Biodiversity." UC Berkeley News. 05 Oct.
2006. Media Relations. 4 Dec. 2006
lthttp//www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2006/
10/05_tropics.shtmlgt.