Literature DB >> 28812553

Rapid recovery of Patagonian plant-insect associations after the end-Cretaceous extinction.

Michael P Donovan1, Ari Iglesias2, Peter Wilf1, Conrad C Labandeira3,3,4,5, N Rubén Cúneo6.   

Abstract

The Southern Hemisphere may have provided biodiversity refugia after the Cretaceous/Palaeogene (K/Pg) mass extinction. However, few extinction and recovery studies have been conducted in the terrestrial realm using well-dated macrofossil sites that span the latest Cretaceous (late Maastrichtian) and early Palaeocene (Danian) outside western interior North America (WINA). Here, we analyse insect-feeding damage on 3,646 fossil leaves from the latest Maastrichtian and three time slices of the Danian in Chubut, Patagonia, Argentina (palaeolatitude approximately 50° S). We test the southern refugial hypothesis and the broader hypothesis that the extinction and recovery of insect herbivores, a central component of terrestrial food webs, differed substantially from WINA at locations far south of the Chicxulub impact structure in Mexico. We find greater insect-damage diversity in Patagonia than in WINA during both the Maastrichtian and Danian, indicating a previously unknown insect richness. As in WINA, the total diversity of Patagonian insect damage decreased from the Cretaceous to the Palaeocene, but recovery to pre-extinction levels occurred within approximately 4 Myr compared with approximately 9 Myr in WINA. As for WINA, there is no convincing evidence for survival of any of the diverse Cretaceous leaf miners in Patagonia, indicating a severe K/Pg extinction of host-specialized insects and no refugium. However, a striking difference from WINA is that diverse, novel leaf mines are present at all Danian sites, demonstrating a considerably more rapid recovery of specialized herbivores and terrestrial food webs. Our results support the emerging idea of large-scale geographic heterogeneity in extinction and recovery from the end-Cretaceous catastrophe.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 28812553     DOI: 10.1038/s41559-016-0012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol        ISSN: 2397-334X            Impact factor:   15.460


  11 in total

1.  Flowering after disaster: Early Danian buckthorn (Rhamnaceae) flowers and leaves from Patagonia.

Authors:  Nathan A Jud; Maria A Gandolfo; Ari Iglesias; Peter Wilf
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-05-10       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  High richness of insect herbivory from the early Miocene Hindon Maar crater, Otago, New Zealand.

Authors:  Anna Lena Möller; Uwe Kaulfuss; Daphne E Lee; Torsten Wappler
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2017-02-16       Impact factor: 2.984

3.  Dry habitats were crucibles of domestication in the evolution of agriculture in ants.

Authors:  Michael G Branstetter; Ana Ješovnik; Jeffrey Sosa-Calvo; Michael W Lloyd; Brant C Faircloth; Seán G Brady; Ted R Schultz
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2017-04-12       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Fossil flowers from the early Palaeocene of Patagonia, Argentina, with affinity to Schizomerieae (Cunoniaceae).

Authors:  Nathan A Jud; Maria A Gandolfo; Ari Iglesias; Peter Wilf
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2018-03-05       Impact factor: 4.357

5.  The importance of sampling standardization for comparisons of insect herbivory in deep time: a case study from the late Palaeozoic.

Authors:  Sandra R Schachat; Conrad C Labandeira; S Augusta Maccracken
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-03-28       Impact factor: 2.963

6.  Plant-insect interactions patterns in three European paleoforests of the late-Neogene-early-Quaternary.

Authors:  Benjamin Adroit; Vincent Girard; Lutz Kunzmann; Jean-Frédéric Terral; Torsten Wappler
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2018-06-20       Impact factor: 2.984

7.  Plant and insect herbivore community variation across the Paleocene-Eocene boundary in the Hanna Basin, southeastern Wyoming.

Authors:  Lauren E Azevedo Schmidt; Regan E Dunn; Jason Mercer; Marieke Dechesne; Ellen D Currano
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2019-10-15       Impact factor: 2.984

8.  Persistent biotic interactions of a Gondwanan conifer from Cretaceous Patagonia to modern Malesia.

Authors:  Michael P Donovan; Peter Wilf; Ari Iglesias; N Rubén Cúneo; Conrad C Labandeira
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2020-11-25

9.  An image dataset of cleared, x-rayed, and fossil leaves vetted to plant family for human and machine learning.

Authors:  Peter Wilf; Scott L Wing; Herbert W Meyer; Jacob A Rose; Rohit Saha; Thomas Serre; N Rubén Cúneo; Michael P Donovan; Diane M Erwin; María A Gandolfo; Erika González-Akre; Fabiany Herrera; Shusheng Hu; Ari Iglesias; Kirk R Johnson; Talia S Karim; Xiaoyu Zou
Journal:  PhytoKeys       Date:  2021-12-16       Impact factor: 1.635

10.  Insect herbivory on Catula gettyi gen. et sp. nov. (Lauraceae) from the Kaiparowits Formation (Late Cretaceous, Utah, USA).

Authors:  S Augusta Maccracken; Ian M Miller; Kirk R Johnson; Joseph M Sertich; Conrad C Labandeira
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 3.752

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