Data from: Paleoenvironments shaped the exchange of terrestrial vertebrates across Wallace's Line

Creators
  • Alexander Skeels
  • Lydian Boschman
  • Ian McFadden ORCID logo
  • Elizabeth Joyce
  • Hagen Oskar
  • Octavio JimĂ©nez
  • Wilhelmine Bach
  • Victor Boussange
  • Thomas Keggin
  • Walter Jetz
  • Loic Pellissier
Publication date 15-08-2023
Description
Faunal turnover in Indo-Australia across Wallace's Line is one of the most recognizable patterns in biogeography and has catalyzed debate about the role of evolutionary and geoclimatic history in biotic interchanges. Here, analysis of over 20,000 vertebrate species with a model of geoclimate and biological diversification shows that broad precipitation tolerance and dispersal ability were key for exchange across the deep-time precipitation gradient spanning the region. Sundanian (Southeast Asian) lineages evolved in a climate similar to the humid 'stepping stones' of Wallacea, facilitating colonization of the Sahulian (Australian) continental shelf. In contrast, Sahulian lineages predominantly evolved in drier conditions, hampering establishment in Sunda, and shaping faunal distinctiveness. We demonstrate how the history of adaptation to past environmental conditions shapes asymmetrical colonization and global biogeographic structure. Faunal turnover in Indo-Australia across Wallace's Line is one of the most recognizable patterns in biogeography and has catalyzed debate about the role of evolutionary and geoclimatic history in biotic interchanges. Here, analysis of over 20,000 vertebrate species with a model of geoclimate and biological diversification shows that broad precipitation tolerance and dispersal ability were key for exchange across the deep-time precipitation gradient spanning the region. Sundanian (Southeast Asian) lineages evolved in a climate similar to the humid 'stepping stones' of Wallacea, facilitating colonization of the Sahulian (Australian) continental shelf. In contrast, Sahulian lineages predominantly evolved in drier conditions, hampering establishment in Sunda, and shaping faunal distinctiveness. We demonstrate how the history of adaptation to past environmental conditions shapes asymmetrical colonization and global biogeographic structure.
Publisher Zenodo
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Document type Dataset
Related publication Paleoenvironments shaped the exchange of terrestrial vertebrates across Wallace's Line
DOI https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.1c59zw41f
Other links https://zenodo.org/records/8250189
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