Seasonality, the latitudinal gradient of diversity, and Eocene insects

Paleobiology ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 374-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bruce Archibald ◽  
William H. Bossert ◽  
David R. Greenwood ◽  
Brian D. Farrell

In the modern world, biotic diversity is typically higher in low-latitude tropical regions where there is abundant insolation (light and heat) and low thermal seasonality. Because these factors broadly covary with latitude, separating their possible effects on species diversity is difficult. The Eocene was a much more equable world, however, with low temperature seasonality extending into lower-insolation higher, cooler latitudes, allowing us to test these factors by comparing insect species diversity in (1) modern, temperate, low-insolation, highly seasonal Harvard Forest, Massachusetts, U.S.A., 42°29'N; (2) modern, tropical, high-insolation, low-seasonality La Selva, Costa Rica, 10°26'N, and; (3) Eocene, temperate, low-insolation, yet low-seasonality McAbee, British Columbia, Canada, above 50°N paleolatitude. We found insect diversity at McAbee to be more similar to La Selva than to Harvard Forest, with high species richness of most groups and decreased diversity of ichneumon wasps, indicating that seasonality is key to the latitudinal diversity gradient. Further, midlatitude Eocene woody dicot diversities at McAbee, Republic (Washington, U.S.A.), and Laguna del Hunco (Argentina) are also high, similar to modern tropical samples, higher than at the modern midlatitude Harvard Forest. Modern correlations between latitude, species diversity, and seasonal climates were established some time after the Eocene.

Insects ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 514
Author(s):  
Zonglei Liang ◽  
Christopher H. Dietrich ◽  
Wu Dai

Xestocephalus Van Duzee is among the most common and widespread genera of Cicadellidae in the temperate and tropical regions of the world. In the present study, 205 specimens of the genus Xestocephalus were collected in Thailand, whereas only a single species of the genus was recorded previously using Malaise trap field sampling, studied by comparative morphology. Seventeen species were recognized, including twelve new species: X. binarius sp. nov., X. chrysanthemum sp. nov., X. cowboyocreus sp. nov., X. densprint sp. nov., X. dimiprocessus sp. nov., X. exproiecturus sp. nov., X. gracilus sp. nov., X. limpidissimus sp. nov., X. malleus sp. nov., X. nonattribus sp. nov., X. recipinams sp. nov., and X. tenusis Liang sp. nov. Four species were recorded in Thailand for the first time: Xestocephalus abyssinicus Heller and Linnavuori, Xestocephalus asper Linnavuori, Xestocephalus ishidae Matsumura, and Xestocephalus toroensis Matsumura. Detailed morphological descriptions of all 17 species are given; photographs of external habitus and male genitalia of the species from Thailand are provided. A checklist of species of the genus is also given, and a key to all Thailand Xestocephalus species is also provided.


2012 ◽  
Vol 279 (1742) ◽  
pp. 3520-3526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Tilston Smith ◽  
Amei Amei ◽  
John Klicka

Climatic and geological changes across time are presumed to have shaped the rich biodiversity of tropical regions. However, the impact climatic drying and subsequent tropical rainforest contraction had on speciation has been controversial because of inconsistent palaeoecological and genetic data. Despite the strong interest in examining the role of climatic change on speciation in the Neotropics there has been few comparative studies, particularly, those that include non-rainforest taxa. We used bird species that inhabit humid or dry habitats that dispersed across the Panamanian Isthmus to characterize temporal and spatial patterns of speciation across this barrier. Here, we show that these two assemblages of birds exhibit temporally different speciation time patterns that supports multiple cycles of speciation. Evidence for these cycles is further corroborated by the finding that both assemblages consist of ‘young’ and ‘old’ species, despite dry habitat species pairs being geographically more distant than pairs of humid habitat species. The matrix of humid and dry habitats in the tropics not only allows for the maintenance of high species richness, but additionally this study suggests that these environments may have promoted speciation. We conclude that differentially expanding and contracting distributions of dry and humid habitats was probably an important contributor to speciation in the tropics.


2013 ◽  
Vol 376 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 445-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cong Liu ◽  
Wenhua Xiang ◽  
Pifeng Lei ◽  
Xiangwen Deng ◽  
Dalun Tian ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 547-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harold F. Greeney

Despite the aseasonality of temperature and day length of many tropical regions, especially when compared with temperate latitudes, most tropical animals show fairly pronounced seasonal shifts in foraging, movement patterns and reproduction (Flecker & Feifarek 1994, Saul 1975, Wolda & Fisk 1981). Understanding reproductive seasonality in tropical avian communities involves distinguishing among complex interactions between weather, resource abundance, hormones, behaviour and other life-history traits (Wikelski et al. 2003). While there is a great deal of evidence that many tropical bird species breed seasonally (Hau 2001, Marchant 1959, Miller 1963, Snow & Snow 1964), we still understand little of the causes which drive observed patterns (Wikelski et al. 2003). Most studies which address the seasonality of reproduction in tropical birds have focused on locations with fairly extreme temporal changes in rainfall (Cruz & Andrews 1989, Lack 1950, Marchant 1959, Poulin et al. 1992, Voous 1950), and comparatively few have looked at relatively aseasonal low-latitude locations (Miller 1963, Moreau 1950). Similarly, though a few studies have pointed out slight variation in the within-species initiation of breeding based on microhabitat (Wikelski et al. 2003), we know very little about how micro-habitat choice for nesting may affect (or be affected by) breeding seasonality. In this study I describe the nesting cycle of the spotted barbtail (Premnoplex brunnescens), from the Ecuadorian Andes to better understand how reproduction may be seasonal when climatic cues are subtle or absent.


Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4362 (4) ◽  
pp. 499
Author(s):  
SUKONTHIP SAVATENALINTON

The species diversity of ostracods in rice fields from Northeast Thailand was studied. Fifty-two samples were collected from 43 rice fields during 2010–2016. This investigation revealed 23 genera and 52 species, including one new to science (Tanycypris eugenkempfi n. sp.) and 21 endemic species: endemic to the Oriental region (14 species), Southeast Asia (two species) and Thailand (five species). In addition, two species that were restricted to rice fields in this study were recognized: Bradleytriebella tuberculata (Hartmann, 1964) and Notodromas sinensis Neale & Zhao, 1991. The most diverse genus was Pseudostrandesia, followed by Strandesia with eight and five species, respectively. The most widely distributed species were Pseudocypretta maculata Klie, 1932 and Strandesia kraepelini (G.W. Müller, 1906) occurring in 48.8 % of the total of surveyed rice fields. The number of species in individual rice fields ranged from none to 18. Most of the samples contained three species, but one rice field showed very high species richness (18 species). Most of the species recorded in this study were also found in several types of water bodies and reported from several zoogeographical regions. The main distinguishing characters between Tanycypris eugenkempfi n. sp. and other Tanycypris species are the more tumid carapace in dorsal view, the distinctly arched dorsal margin of the carapace in lateral view, the presence of a subapical dorsal seta on the first segment of the first antenna, the smooth large bristles on the third endite of the maxillula, the absence of c-seta on the first thoracopod, and the long proximal claw (Gp) of the caudal ramus. 


Review of Culture and Cultivation in Early Modern England: Writing and the Land, by Michael Leslie and Timothy Raylor; Death and the Metropolis: Studies in the Demographic History of London 1670-1830, by John Landers; Capitalism, Culture and Decline in Britain, 1750-1990, by W. D. Rubinstein; Subverting Scotland's Past: Scottish Whig Historians and the Creation of an Anglo-British Identity, 1689-c.1830, by Colin Kidd; Outsiders: Class, Gender and Nation, by Dorothy Thompson; Land and Economy in Baroque Italy: Valpolicella, 1630-1797, by Peter Musgrave; The Seduction of the Mediterranean: Writing, Art, and Homosexual Fantasy, by Robert Aldrich; Geographical Inquiry and American Historical Problems, by Carville Earle; Historical Atlas of Canada, Vol. II: The Land Transformed, 1880-1891, by R. Louis Gentilcore; In the Absence of Towns: Settlement and Country Trade in Southside Virginia, 1730-1800, by Charles J. Farmer; North American Cattle-Ranching Frontiers: Origins, Diffusion, and Differentiation, by Terry G. Jordan; From Wooden Ploughs to Welfare: Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces, by Helen Buckley; Russian Refuge: Religion, Migration, and Settlement on the North American Pacific Rim, by Susan Wiley Hardwick; La Paz de Dios y del Rey: la Conquista de la Selva Lacandona, 1525-1821. Oro Verde: la Conquista de la Selva Lacandona por los Maderos Tabasqueños, 1822-1949, by Jan de Vos; Haciendas and 'Ayllus': Rural Society in the Bolivian Andes in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries, by Herbert S. Klein; Ideology and Landscape in Historical Perspective: Essays on the Meanings of Some Places in the Past, by A. R.H. Baker and G. Bilger; The Early Modern World-System in Georgraphical Perspectie, by Hans-Jurgen Nitz; European Expansion and Migration: Essays on the Intercontinental Migration from Africa, Asia and Europe, by P. C. Emmer and M. Mörner; Mass Migration in Europe: The Legacy and the Future, by Russell King; Asia in the Making of Europe, Volume III: A Century of Advance Book 1: Trade, Missions, Literature; Book 2: South Asia; Book 3: Southeast Asia; Book 4: East Asia, by Donald F. Lach and Edwin J. Van Kley; The Remaking of Istanbul: Portrait of an Ottoman City in the Nineteenth Century, by Zeynep Çelik; The Shona and Their Neighbours, by David Beach and Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing and Transculturation, by Mary Louise Pratt

1994 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 465-498
Author(s):  
Tom Williamson ◽  
Peter Clark ◽  
A.G. Hopkins ◽  
Rab Houston ◽  
Gillian Rose ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 310-310
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Westrop ◽  
James V. Tremblay ◽  
Ed Landing

Declining importance of trilobites was a key feature of Ordovician community “evolution”. Previous work has shown that replacement of trilobite-dominated communities by mollusc- and brachiopod-dominated communities was diachronous, occurring initially in nearshore settings. The processes responsible for these changes remain unclear, although many previous discussions have invoked some form of displacement of dominants of one community by those of another.New data from more than thirty large collections made from nearshore facies at five localities in Canada and the northern United States indicate that, in this setting, trilobite species diversity maintained a constant low level (mean and mode of 3 species) between the Early Upper Cambrian (Marjuman) and the Late Middle Ordovician (Blackriveran). Reorganization of nearshore communites proceeded by addition of new elements, especially molluscs, from the Late Cambrian (Sunwaptan) onwards. Decline in the relative importance of trilobites was a case of dilution as species of new clades accumulated, rather than actual displacement. Trilobites appear to have been passive bystanders in Ordovician nearshore community “evolution”. Towards the end of the Ordovician, trilobites vacated nearshore environments in the Appalachian region. However, this appears to be related to environmental changes associated with progradation of clastic wedges during the development of the Taconic foreland basin.A process of dilution may at least partly explain the offshore retreat of trilobite-dominated assemblages during the Ordovician. Offshore trilobite assemblages reached much greater species diversity than those of nearshore settings, so that their dilution via the addition of species of newly radiating clades would have proceeded more slowly. That is, trilobite-dominated paleocommunities may have persisted into the Ordovician in the outer shelf simply because this was the region in which, historically, they attained maximum species richness. Moreover, given the existence of a general pattern of increasing total species diversity of communities from nearshore to offshore sites, the tendency for newly radiating clades to attain maximum species richness offshore is not surprising: they are merely conforming to a general, environmentally-related diversity gradient that has existed throughout the Phanerozoic.


2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Gworek ◽  
Wojciech Dmuchowski ◽  
Aneta H. Baczewska-Dąbrowska

Abstract Background Environmental contamination by mercury is and will continue to be a serious risk for human health. Pollution of the terrestrial environment is particularly important as it is a place of human life and food production. This publication presents a review of the literature on issues related to mercury pollution of the terrestrial environment: soil and plants and their transformations. Results Different forms of atmospheric Hg may be deposited on surfaces by way of wet and dry processes. These forms may be sequestered within terrestrial compartments or emitted back into the atmosphere, and the relative importance of these processes is dependent on the form of Hg, the surface chemistry, and the environmental conditions. On the land surface, Hg deposition mainly occurs in the oxidized form (Hg2+), and its transformations are associated primarily with the oxidation–reduction potential of the environment and the biological and chemical processes of methylation. The deposition of Hg pollutants on the ground with low vegetation is as 3–5 times lower than that in forests. The estimation of Hg emissions from soil and plants, which occur mainly in the Hg0 form, is very difficult. Generally, the largest amounts of Hg are emitted from tropical regions, followed by the temperate zone, and the lowest levels are from the polar regions. Areas with vegetation can be ranked according to the size of the emissions as follows: forests > other areas (tundra, savannas, and chaparral) > agricultural areas > grassland ecosystems; areas of land devoid of vegetation emit more Hg than those with plants. In areas with high pollution, such as areas near Hg mines, the Hg content in soil and plants is much higher than in other areas. Conclusions Mercury is recognized as a toxic, persistent, and mobile contaminant; it does not degrade in the environment and becomes mobile because of the volatility of the element and several of its compounds. Atmospheric contamination by mercury continues to be one of the most important environmental problems in the modern world. The general conclusions were drawn from a review of the literature and presented in this paper.


Sociobiology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 33
Author(s):  
Eltamara Souza da Conceição ◽  
Terezinha Maria Castro Della Lucia ◽  
Antonio De Oliveira Costa Neto ◽  
Érica Dos Santos Araújo ◽  
Elmo Borges de A. Koch ◽  
...  

Agriculture is frequently held accountable for the depletion of biotic diversity, although a few agroforestry systems support the conservation of a number of organisms. Cocoa farming is noteworthy as an example of an agricultural activity that benefits or maintains species richness. However, the mechanism by which the biodiversity persists throughout the entire process of plant development remains obscure. In Southeastern Bahia, Brazil, cacao tree plantations support the conservation of a large amount of organisms native to the Atlantic Forest, between them the ants. This study aims at recording the relationship between cocoa tree development and ant community structure. The experiment was carried out in a series of six cocoa tree plantations aged one, three, four, eight, fifteen and 33 years, distributed across the experimental grounds of the Cocoa Research Center at Ilhéus. 1,500 ant samples were collected using the sampling techniques: hand collection, honey and sardine baits, entomological blanket and “pitfall”. Highest values for diversity and richness were reported in the 15-years-old cocoa plantation. No significant correlations between diversity, richness or plant age were reported. Considering the faunistic composition, a statistical similarity was observed between the plantations close in age to one another. Plant aging did not exert any influence on the diversity gradient and richness in the succession process of the ant community. In young plantations, there are low differences between the ants found on the ground and the ones found on the young cocoa trees. In older plantations, the ant community divides in two distinct assemblages on the ground and on the trees. The variations observed in the ant community along the plant development were likely caused by the structural organization of the dominant species mosaic.


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