Independent evolution of baleen whale gigantism linked to Plio-Pleistocene ocean dynamics

Author:

Slater Graham J.1ORCID,Goldbogen Jeremy A.2,Pyenson Nicholas D.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of the Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

2. Department of Biology, Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, CA, USA

3. Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC, USA

Abstract

Vertebrates have evolved to gigantic sizes repeatedly over the past 250 Myr, reaching their extreme in today's baleen whales (Mysticeti). Hypotheses for the evolution of exceptionally large size in mysticetes range from niche partitioning to predator avoidance, but there has been no quantitative examination of body size evolutionary dynamics in this clade and it remains unclear when, why or how gigantism evolved. By fitting phylogenetic macroevolutionary models to a dataset consisting of living and extinct species, we show that mysticetes underwent a clade-wide shift in their mode of body size evolution during the Plio-Pleistocene. This transition, from Brownian motion-like dynamics to a trended random walk towards larger size, is temporally linked to the onset of seasonally intensified upwelling along coastal ecosystems. High prey densities resulting from wind-driven upwelling, rather than abundant resources alone, are the primary determinant of efficient foraging in extant mysticetes and Late Pliocene changes in ocean dynamics may have provided an ecological pathway to gigantism in multiple independent lineages.

Funder

Smithsonian Institution, its Remington Kellogg Fund

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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