Title of article :
Origin and evolution of the grazing guild in new world terrestrial mammals
Author/Authors :
Bruce J. MacFadden، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
6
From page :
182
To page :
187
Abstract :
Although vertebrate herbivory has existed on land for about 300 million years, the grazingadaptation, principally developed in mammals, did not appear until the middle Cenozoic about 30 million years ago. Paleontological evidence indicates that grazing mammals diversified at the time of the spread of grasslands. Recently revised fossil calibrations reveal that the grazing mammal guild originated during the early Miocene in South America about 10–15 million years earlier than it did during the late Miocene in the northern hemisphere. Carbon isotopic analyses of extinct grazersʹ teeth reveal that this guild originated predominantly in C3 terrestrial ecosystems. The present-day distribution of C3 and C4 grasslands evolved on the global ecological landscape since the late Miocene, after about 7 million years ago.
Journal title :
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Record number :
769862
Link To Document :
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