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Articles

Relating environmental change and species stability in Late Ordovician seas

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Pages 249-253 | Received 04 Jun 2013, Accepted 03 Oct 2013, Published online: 10 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Niche stability of a diverse suite of 21 invertebrate species and genera from the Cincinnatian Series (Katian Stage) of North America was examined using spatial distribution modeling across nine time slices, including abiotic and biotic environmental change. Niche stability varied through time. The focal taxa exhibited niche stability ( = no adaptive response) and tracked their preferred environment laterally to accommodate gradual sea-level fall. Niche evolution increased during the Richmondian Invasion. Species adjusted to the introduction of new competitors by contracting their niche into a subset of their previous niche parameters. In Cincinnatian species and genera, adaptive response (stability vs. evolution) was related to the tempo and mode of environmental change.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Daniel Goldman and Jisuo Jin for constructive comments on an earlier version of this article. This research was supported by NSF EAR-0922067 to Stigall and the Dry Dredgers Paul Sanders Award, a Geological Society of America Student Research Grant and an Ohio University Geological Sciences Alumni Grant to Brame. This is a contribution to IGPC 591.

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