The Effects of Cenozoic Global Change on Squirrel Phylogeny

Author:

Mercer John M.1,Roth V. Louise1

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708–0338, USA.(J.M.M.); (V.L.R.)

Abstract

By modifying habitats and creating bridges and barriers between landmasses, climate change and tectonic events are believed to have important consequences for diversification of terrestrial organisms. Such consequences should be most evident in phylogenetic histories of groups that are ancient, widespread, and diverse. The squirrel family (Sciuridae) is one of very few mammalian families endemic to Eurasia, Africa, and North and South America and is ideal for examining these issues. Through phylogenetic and molecular-clock analyses, we infer that arrival and diversification of squirrels in Africa, on Sunda Shelf islands, across Beringea, and across the Panamanian isthmus coincide in timing and location with multiple well-documented sea-level, tectonic, and paleontological events. These precise correspondences point to an important role for global change in the diversification of a major group of mammals.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference36 articles.

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2. Simpson G. G., Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 85, 1 (1945).

3. Rodent Phylogeny and a Timescale for the Evolution of Glires: Evidence from an Extensive Taxon Sampling Using Three Nuclear Genes

4. D. E. Wilson D. M. Reeder Eds. Mammal Species of the World (Smithsonian Institution Press Washington DC ed. 2 1993).

5. R. J. Emry R. W. Thorington in Living Fossils N. Eldredge S. M. Stanley Eds. (Springer New York 1984) pp. 23–31.

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