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Quaternary megafauna extinctions altered body size distribution in tortoises
ISSN: 0962-8452 ;EISSN: 1471-2954 ;DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1947 ;DOI: 10.5167/uzh-223453
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Title:
Quaternary megafauna extinctions altered body size distribution in tortoises
Author:
Joos, Julia
;
Pimiento, Catalina
;
Miles, Donald B
;
Müller, Johannes
Subjects:
Department of Paleontology
;
Fossils & prehistoric life
;
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, General Environmental Science, General Immunology and Microbiology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Medicine
Description:
The late Quaternary is characterized by the extinction of many terrestrial megafauna, which included tortoises (Family: Testudinidae). However, limited information is available on how extinction shaped the phenotype of surviving taxa. Here, based on a global dataset of straight carapace length, we investigate the temporal variation, spatial distribution and evolution of tortoise body size over the past 23 million years, thereby capturing the effects of Quaternary extinctions in this clade. We found a significant change in body size distribution characterized by a reduction of both mean body size and maximum body size of extant tortoises relative to fossil taxa. This reduction of body size occurred earlier in mainland (Early Pleistocene 2.588–0.781 Ma) than in island tortoises (Late Pleistocene/Holocene 0.126–0 Ma). Despite contrasting body size patterns between fossil and extant taxa on a spatial scale, tortoise body size showed limited variation over time until this decline. Body size is a fundamental functional trait determining many aspects of species ecologies, with large tortoises playing key roles as ecosystem engineers. As such, the transition from larger sized to smaller sized classes indicated by our findings likely resulted in the homogenization of tortoises' ecological functions and diminished the role of tortoises in structuring the vegetation community.
Publisher:
Royal Society Publishing
Creation Date:
2022-11
Language:
English
Identifier:
ISSN: 0962-8452
EISSN: 1471-2954
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1947
DOI: 10.5167/uzh-223453
Source:
ZORA
PubMed Central
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