Paper
21
Graham R.W. 1986. Response of
mammalian communities to environmental changes during the late Quaternary.
Pages 300-313 in
J.
Diamond and T.J. Case, eds., Community Ecology. Harper and Rowe, New York.
Blog by
Kaitlyn Sullivan
Paper Author: Russell W. Graham
(Commentary by Kathleen
Lyons)
Russell W. Graham
·
Professor
for the Department of Geosciences, Penn State University
·
Museum
Director, Penn State University
·
Ph.D.,
University of Texas at Austin, 1976
Research Interests
·
Vertebrate
Paleontology
·
Quaternary
Vertebrate Paleoecology
·
Taphonomy
·
Neotoma
Paleoecological Database
Kathleen Lyons
- Ph.D. University of Chicago
- M.S. University of Chicago
- M.S. Texas Tech University
- B.S. Wayland Baptist University
Currently, Kathleen S.
Lyons is an assistant professor of biological sciences at the University of
Nebraska. “I am interested in the
factors affecting and controlling species diversity at multiple scales across
both space and time. Moreover, I am particularly interested in the effects of
global climate change on species diversity and use the fossil record of mammals
to evaluate how current changes in global climate may affect diversity patterns
in the future. Because it provides a useful way to compare modern species and
communities to fossil species and communities, I focus on the similarities and
differences in macroecological patterns across space and time.”
Summary
For
a long time, ecologists generally believed that communities were made up of
interacting sets of the same species for a long time. However, Graham argued that this is a flawed
theory and the species within a community likely changed over time rather than
remaining static. To test this, Graham
utilized the fossil record using fossils of small mammals from the late
Pleistocene and Holocene. By doing so,
he determined that small mammals even had “long distance range shifts during
the last glaciation cycle.” His data
provided a medium to show that communities have changed, leading to new
combinations of species with ranges that do not overlap today.
I'm sorry, I just don't have anything to say about this paper.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting chapter!
ReplyDeleteHad a question about what he says on page 311 under "Maintenance of Pleistocene Diversity" about "poor sites" and "better sites" - I'm not sure if I follow how nutritional value here ties into the conversation here.