Me. Morgan et al., COMPARATIVE PALEOECOLOGY OF PALEOGENE AND NEOGENE MAMMALIAN FAUNAS - BODY-SIZE STRUCTURE, Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 115(1-4), 1995, pp. 287-317
Species size is correlated with many aspects of life history, ecology,
and behavior, which means that size changes within species, lineages,
and faunas represent an important component of evolutionary paleoecol
ogy. Comparison of Paleogene mammalian faunas from the Bighorn, Clarks
Fork, and Crazy Mountains basins of Wyoming and Montana with Neogene
mammalian faunas from the Siwalik Group of northern Pakistan reveals s
imilarities and differences in patterns of size change through interva
ls of 10 m.y. Two approaches to size change are presented. The first i
s to evaluate changes in the size distribution of faunas over three ti
me intervals in each sequence. Rank-ordered size distributions, or cen
ograms, are used to depict faunal size structure for non-carnivorous s
pecies. The slopes and gaps in different regions of the size spectrum
reflect conditions of vegetation and climate, by analogy with modern m
ammalian faunas (Legendre, 1986, 1989). For the Paleogene and Neogene
faunas, subtle changes over time in size structure reflect changes in
local vegetation and climate. The Paleogene cenograms suggest a habita
t shift from mesic to humid forest, and the Neogene cenograms suggest
a shift from open woodland to savannah scrub. These interpretations ar
e supported by concurrent changes in trophic structure, faunal turnove
r, and in floral and geologic indicators. The second approach focuses
on size change within species and lineages in several families of pred
ominantly herbivorous species. For 60 Paleogene species and 39 Neogene
species, change in average species size over successive biostratigrap
hic intervals is assessed by a criterion of doubling or halving of bod
y mass relative to the preceding interval. New occurrences are compare
d to established species of the same genus and of the same family. In
both records, size increases occur slightly more often than size decre
ases. The size distribution of groups changes more often through appea
rances of species of more than double or less than half the size of es
tablished species of the same group or by disappearances, rather than
through rapid change of size within species. The pattern of change in
median size and size range of contemporaneous species varies among fam
ilies in both records. Three causes of evolutionary size change-climat
ic change, competition, and predation-are evaluated. In both records,
climatic change and interspecific competition are considered the princ
iple mechanisms for the observed changes.