Published July 11, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The impact of paleoclimatic changes on body size evolution in marine fishes

  • 1. University of Oklahoma
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. Università degli Studi di Torino
  • 4. National Research Collections Australia
  • 5. Smithsonian Institution
  • 6. George Washington University
  • 7. University of Bath
  • 8. Université de Lyon

Description

Body size is an important species trait, correlating with life span, fecundity, and other ecological factors. Over Earth's geological history, climate shifts have occurred, potentially shaping body size evolution in many clades. General rules attempting to summarize body size evolution include Bergmann's rule, which states that species reach larger sizes in cooler environments and smaller sizes in warmer environments, and Cope's rule, which poses that lineages tend to increase in size over evolutionary time. Tetraodontiform fishes (including pufferfishes, boxfishes, and ocean sunfishes) provide an extraordinary clade to test these rules in ectotherms owing to their exemplary fossil record and the great disparity in body size observed among extant and fossil species. We examined Bergmann's and Cope's rules in this group by combining phylogenomic data (1,103 exon loci from 185 extant species) with 210 anatomical characters coded from both fossil and extant species. We aggregated data layers on paleoclimate and body size from the species examined, and inferred a set of time-calibrated phylogenies using tip-dating approaches for downstream comparative analyses of body size evolution by implementing models that incorporate paleoclimatic information. We found strong support for a temperature-driven model in which increasing body size over time is correlated with decreasing oceanic temperatures. On average, extant tetraodontiforms are two to three times larger than their fossil counterparts, which otherwise evolved during periods of warmer ocean temperatures. These results provide strong support for both Bergmann's and Cope's rules, trends that are less studied in marine fishes compared to terrestrial vertebrates and marine invertebrates.

Data availability

Raw sequence reads are available at the National Center for Biotechnology Information Sequence Read Archive BioProject (number PRJNA767646) (77). All other supplementary data, including all code and scripts and datasets, have been deposited in Dryad (https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.z34tmpgfw) (78). All other study data are included in the article and supporting information.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2122486119
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9689

Funding

National Science Foundation
DEB-2015404
National Science Foundation
DEB-2144325
National Science Foundation
DBI- 2131464
National Science Foundation
DEB-1932759
National Science Foundation
DEB-1929248
National Science Foundation
DEB-1457426
National Science Foundation
DEB-1541554
National Science Foundation
DEB-1541552
University of Oklahoma

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Evolutionary Biology, Organismal Biology and Anatomy