An extreme climate gradient-induced ecological regionalization in the Upper Cretaceous Western Interior Basin of North America

Author:

Burgener Landon1ORCID,Hyland Ethan1,Griffith Emily2,Mitášová Helena1,Zanno Lindsay E.34,Gates Terry A.34

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, 2800 Faucette Drive, Room 1125, Jordan Hall, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA

2. Department of Statistics, North Carolina State University, 5109 SAS Hall, 2311 Stinson Drive, Raleigh, North Carolina 2769, USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences, 112 Derieux Place, Room 3510, Thomas Hall, CB 7614, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7614, USA, and North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA

4. Paleontology, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, 11 West Jones Street, Raleigh, North Carolina 27601, USA

Abstract

Abstract The Upper Cretaceous Western Interior Basin of North America provides a unique laboratory for constraining the effects of spatial climate patterns on the macroevolution and spatiotemporal distribution of biological communities across geologic timescales. Previous studies suggested that Western Interior Basin terrestrial ecosystems were divided into distinct southern and northern communities, and that this provincialism was maintained by a putative climate barrier at ∼50°N paleolatitude; however, this climate barrier hypothesis has yet to be tested. We present mean annual temperature (MAT) spatial interpolations for the Western Interior Basin that confirm the presence of a distinct terrestrial climate barrier in the form of a MAT transition zone between 48°N and 58°N paleolatitude during the final 15 m.y. of the Cretaceous. This transition zone was characterized by steep latitudinal temperature gradients and divided the Western Interior Basin into warm southern and cool northern biomes. Similarity analyses of new compilations of fossil pollen and leaf records from the Western Interior Basin suggest that the biogeographical distribution of primary producers in the Western Interior Basin was heavily influenced by the presence of this temperature transition zone, which in turn may have impacted the distribution of the entire trophic system across western North America.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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