THE SOUTHERN-OCEAN BENTHIC FAUNA AND CLIMATE CHANGE - A HISTORICAL-PERSPECTIVE

被引:188
|
作者
CLARKE, A
CRAME, JA
机构
关键词
D O I
10.1098/rstb.1992.0150
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Environmental change is the norm and it is likely that, particularly on the geological timescale, the temperature regime experienced by marine organisms has never been stable. These temperature changes vary in timescale from daily, through seasonal variations, to long-term environmental change over tens of millions of years. Whereas physiological work can give information on how individual organisms may react phenotypically to short-term change, the way benthic communities react to long-term change can only be studied from the fossil record. The present benthic marine fauna of the Southern Ocean is rich and diverse, consisting of a mixture of taxa with differing evolutionary histories and biogeographical affinities, suggesting that at no time in the Cenozoic did continental ice sheets extend sufficiently to eradicate all shallow-water faunas around Antarctica at the same time. Nevertheless, certain features do suggest the operation of vicariant processes, and climatic cycles affecting distributional ranges and ice-sheet extension may both have enhanced speciation processes. The overall cooling of southern high-latitude seas since the mid-Eocene has been neither smooth nor steady. Intermittent periods of global warming and the influence of Milankovitch cyclicity is likely to have led to regular pulses of migration in and out of Antarctica. The resultant diversity pump may explain in part the high species richness of some marine taxa in the Southern Ocean. It is difficult to suggest how the existing fauna will react to present global warming. Although it is certain the fauna will change, as all faunas have done throughout evolutionary time, we cannot predict with confidence how it will do so.
引用
收藏
页码:299 / 309
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [22] EDUCATIONAL-RESEARCH IN TRANSITION - AN HISTORICAL-PERSPECTIVE ON EDITORIAL CHANGE
    HODYSH, HW
    [J]. ALBERTA JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, 1994, 40 (04): : 472 - 473
  • [23] Penguin responses to climate change in the Southern Ocean
    Forcada, Jaume
    Trathan, Philip N.
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2009, 15 (07) : 1618 - 1630
  • [24] WHITE MINERS IN HISTORICAL-PERSPECTIVE - SOUTHERN RHODESIA, 1890-1953
    PHIMISTER, I
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN AFRICAN STUDIES, 1977, 3 (02) : 187 - 206
  • [25] Missing link in the Southern Ocean:: sampling the marine benthic fauna of remote Bouvet Island
    Arntz, WE
    Thatje, S
    Linse, K
    Avila, C
    Ballesteros, M
    Barnes, DKA
    Cope, T
    Cristobo, FJ
    De Broyer, C
    Gutt, J
    Isla, E
    López-González, P
    Montiel, A
    Munilla, T
    Esplá, AAR
    Raupach, M
    Rauschert, M
    Rodríguez, E
    Teixidó, N
    [J]. POLAR BIOLOGY, 2006, 29 (02) : 83 - 96
  • [26] Missing link in the Southern Ocean: sampling the marine benthic fauna of remote Bouvet Island
    Wolf E. Arntz
    Sven Thatje
    Katrin Linse
    Conxita Avila
    Manuel Ballesteros
    David K. A. Barnes
    Thérèse Cope
    Francisco J. Cristobo
    Claude de Broyer
    Julian Gutt
    Enrique Isla
    Pablo López-González
    Américo Montiel
    Tomás Munilla
    Alfonso A. Ramos Esplá
    Michael Raupach
    Martin Rauschert
    Estefanía Rodríguez
    Núria Teixidó
    [J]. Polar Biology, 2006, 29 : 83 - 96
  • [27] Changes of benthic fauna in the Kattegat - An indication of climate change at mid-latitudes?
    Goransson, Peter
    [J]. ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2017, 194 : 276 - 285
  • [28] A future perspective of historical contributions to climate change
    Skeie, Ragnhild B.
    Peters, Glen P.
    Fuglestvedt, Jan
    Andrew, Robbie
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2021, 164 (1-2)
  • [29] A future perspective of historical contributions to climate change
    Ragnhild B. Skeie
    Glen P. Peters
    Jan Fuglestvedt
    Robbie Andrew
    [J]. Climatic Change, 2021, 164
  • [30] POPULATION-GROWTH AND AGRARIAN CHANGE - AN HISTORICAL-PERSPECTIVE - GRIGG,D
    BEST, ACG
    [J]. GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, 1982, 72 (03) : 372 - 373