The latitudinal biodiversity gradient through deep time.

Mannion PD, Upchurch P, Benson RBJ, Goswami A

Today, biodiversity decreases from equatorial to polar regions. This is a fundamental pattern governing the distribution of extant organisms, the understanding of which is critical to predicting climatically driven biodiversity loss. However, its causes remain unresolved. The fossil record offers a unique perspective on the evolution of this latitudinal biodiversity gradient (LBG), providing a dynamic system in which to explore spatiotemporal diversity fluctuations. Deep-time studies indicate that a tropical peak and poleward decline in species diversity has not been a persistent pattern throughout the Phanerozoic, but is restricted to intervals of the Palaeozoic and the past 30 million years. A tropical peak might characterise cold icehouse climatic regimes, whereas warmer greenhouse regimes display temperate diversity peaks or flattened gradients.

Keywords:

biogeography

,

climate

,

dinosaurs

,

greenhouse

,

icehouse

,

phanerozoic

,

seasonality

,

Biodiversity

,

Biological Evolution

,

Fossils

,

Geography

,

Models, Biological