Ecological selectivity and the evolution of mammalian substrate preference across the K-Pg boundary.
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Publication Date
2021-11Journal Title
Ecol Evol
ISSN
2045-7758
Publisher
Wiley
Volume
11
Issue
21
Pages
14540-14554
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Hughes, J. J., Berv, J. S., Chester, S. G., Sargis, E. J., & Field, D. J. (2021). Ecological selectivity and the evolution of mammalian substrate preference across the K-Pg boundary.. Ecol Evol, 11 (21), 14540-14554. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8114
Abstract
The Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction 66 million years ago was characterized by a worldwide ecological catastrophe and rapid species turnover. Large-scale devastation of forested environments resulting from the Chicxulub asteroid impact likely influenced the evolutionary trajectories of multiple clades in terrestrial environments, and it has been hypothesized to have biased survivorship in favour of nonarboreal lineages across the K-Pg boundary. Here, we evaluate patterns of substrate preferences across the K-Pg boundary among crown group mammals, a group that underwent rapid diversification following the mass extinction. Using Bayesian, likelihood, and parsimony reconstructions, we identify patterns of mammalian ecological selectivity that are broadly similar to those previously hypothesized for birds. Models based on extant taxa indicate predominant K-Pg survivorship among semi- or nonarboreal taxa, followed by numerous independent transitions to arboreality in the early Cenozoic. However, contrary to the predominant signal, some or all members of total-clade Euarchonta (Primates + Dermoptera + Scandentia) appear to have maintained arboreal habits across the K-Pg boundary, suggesting ecological flexibility during an interval of global habitat instability. We further observe a pronounced shift in character state transitions away from plesiomorphic arboreality associated with the K-Pg transition. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that predominantly nonarboreal taxa preferentially survived the end-Cretaceous mass extinction, and emphasize the pivotal influence of the K-Pg transition in shaping the early evolutionary trajectories of extant terrestrial vertebrates.
Keywords
ancestral state reconstruction, euarchontans, marsupials, paleoecology, placentals, substrate use
Sponsorship
NSF
Funder references
MRC (MR/S032177)
Isaac Newton Trust (13.21(c)/18.47(a))
Identifiers
PMC8571592, 34765124
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8114
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/332285
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