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Speciation and stasis in marine Ostracoda: Climatic modulation of evolution

January 1, 1985

Morphologic and paleozoogeographic analysis of Cenozoic marine Ostracoda from the Atlantic, Caribbean, and Pacific indicates that climatic change modulates evolution by disrupting long-term stasis and catalyzing speciation during sustained, unidirectional climatic transitions and, conversely, by maintaining morphologic stasis during rapid, high-frequency climatic osculations. In the middle Pliocene, 4 to 3 million years ago, at least six new species of Puriana suddenly appeared as the Isthmus of Panama closed, changing oceanographic circulation and global climate. Since then morphologic stasis has characterized ancestral and descendant species during many glacial-interglacial cycles. The frequency and duration of climatic events have more impact on ostracode evolution than the magnitude of climatic changes.

Publication Year 1985
Title Speciation and stasis in marine Ostracoda: Climatic modulation of evolution
Authors T. M. Cronin
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70013136
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse