High-latitude ocean habitats are a crucible of fish body shape diversification

Author:

Burns Michael D1ORCID,Friedman Sarah T1ORCID,Corn Katherine A2ORCID,Larouche Olivier3ORCID,Price Samantha A4ORCID,Wainwright Peter C1ORCID,Burress Edward D5

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Davis Department of Evolution & Ecology, , Davis, CA , United States

2. Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Department of Biological Sciences, , Blacksburg, VA , United States

3. University of Houston Department of Biology and Biochemistry, , Houston, TX , United States

4. Clemson University Department of Biological Sciences, , Clemson, SC , United States

5. University of Alabama Department of Biological Sciences, , Tuscaloosa, AL , United States

Abstract

Abstract A decline in diversity from the equator to the poles is a common feature of Earth’s biodiversity. Here, we examine body shape diversity in marine fishes across latitudes and explore the role of time and evolutionary rate in explaining the diversity gradient. Marine fishes’ occupation of upper latitude environments has increased substantially over the last 80 million years. Fishes in the highest latitudes exhibit twice the rate of body shape evolution and one and a third times the disparity compared to equatorial latitudes. The faster evolution of body shape may be a response to increased ecological opportunity in polar and subpolar oceans due to (1) the evolution of antifreeze proteins allowing certain lineages to invade regions of cold water, (2) environmental disturbances driven by cyclical warming and cooling in high latitudes, and (3) rapid transitions across depth gradients. Our results add to growing evidence that evolutionary rates are often faster at temperate, not tropical, latitudes.

Funder

NSF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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