Effects of late quaternary climate change on Palearctic shrews |
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Authors: | Stefan Prost Johannes Klietmann Thijs van Kolfschoten Robert P. Guralnick Eric Waltari Klaas Vrieling Mathias Stiller Doris Nagel Gernot Rabeder Michael Hofreiter Robert S. Sommer |
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Affiliation: | 1. Research Group Molecular Ecology, Max‐Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, , Leipzig, 04103 Germany;2. Department of Paleontology, University of Vienna, , Vienna, 1090 Austria;3. Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University, , Leiden, 2311 BE The Netherlands;4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and University of Colorado Museum, University of Colorado, , Boulder, CO, 80309 USA;5. Department of Biology, City College of New York, , New York, NY, 10033 USA;6. Institute of Biology, Leiden University, , Leiden, 2300 RA The Netherlands;7. Institute for Natural Resource Conservation, Christian‐Albrechts‐University of Kiel, , Kiel, 24118 Germany |
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Abstract: | The Late Quaternary was a time of rapid climatic oscillations and drastic environmental changes. In general, species can respond to such changes by behavioral accommodation, distributional shifts, ecophenotypic modifications (nongenetic), evolution (genetic) or ultimately face local extinction. How those responses manifested in the past is essential for properly predicting future ones especially as the current warm phase is further intensified by rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Here, we use ancient DNA (aDNA) and morphological features in combination with ecological niche modeling (ENM) to investigate genetic and nongenetic responses of Central European Palearctic shrews to past climatic change. We show that a giant form of shrew, previously described as an extinct Pleistocene Sorex species, represents a large ecomorph of the common shrew (Sorex araneus), which was replaced by populations from a different gene‐pool and with different morphology after the Pleistocene Holocene transition. We also report the presence of the cold‐adapted tundra shrew (S. tundrensis) in Central Europe. This species is currently restricted to Siberia and was hitherto unknown as an element of the Pleistocene fauna of Europe. Finally, we show that there is no clear correlation between climatic oscillations within the last 50 000 years and body size in shrews and conclude that a special nonanalogous situation with regard to biodiversity and food supply in the Late Glacial may have caused the observed large body size. |
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Keywords: | ancient DNA body size change ecological niche modeling late quaternary climate change Palearctic shrews |
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