The temperate marine Peruvian Province: How history accounts for its unusual biota

DeVries, Thomas J.; Griffin, Miguel; Nielsen, Sven N.; Ochoa, Diana; RIVADENEIRA-VALENZUELA, MARCELO MICHAEL; Valdovinos, Fernanda

Abstract

The Peruvian Province, from 6 degrees S in Peru to 42 degrees S in Chile, is a highly productive coastal marine region whose biology and fossil record have long been studied separately but never integrated. To understand how past events and conditions affected today's species composition and interactions, we examined the role of extinction, colonization, geologic changes to explain previously unrecognized peculiar features of the biota and to compare the Peruvian Province's history to that of other climatically similar temperate coasts. We synthesized all available data on the benthic (or benthically feeding) biota, with emphasis on fossilizable taxa, for the interval from the Miocene (23-5.4 Ma) and Pliocene (5.4-2.5 Ma) to the present. We outline the history of ecological guilds including primary producers, herbivores, predators, and suspension-feeders and document patterns of extinction, colonization, and geographic restriction. We identify twelve unusual attributes of the biota, most of which are the result of repeated episodes of extinction. Several guilds present during the Miocene and Pliocene are not represented in the province today, while groups such as kelps and perhaps intertidal predatory sea stars are relative newcomers. Guilds on soft bottoms and in sheltered habitats were severely affected by extinction, whereas those on hard bottoms were most affected by colonists and held their own in diversity. The Peruvian Province has not served as a biogeographic refuge, in contrast to the coasts of Australasia and Argentina, where lineages no longer present in the Peruvian Province survive. The loss of sheltered habitats since the Pliocene explains many of the present-day peculiarities of the biota. The history of the province's biota explains its unique attributes. High productivity, a rich Southern Hemisphere heritage, and colonization from the north account for the present-day composition and unusual characteristics of the biota.

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Título según WOS: The temperate marine Peruvian Province: How history accounts for its unusual biota
Título según SCOPUS: ID SCOPUS_ID:85199053428 Not found in local SCOPUS DB
Título de la Revista: ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volumen: 14
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2024
DOI:

10.1002/ECE3.70048

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS