File:Radiolarian biogeography with observed and predicted responses to temperature change.webp

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English: Radiolarian biogeography with observed and predicted responses to temperature change

a Illustrates generalized radiolarian provinces[1][2] and their relationship to water mass temperature (warm versus cool color shading) and circulation (gray arrows). Due to high-latitude water mass submergence under warm, stratified waters in lower latitudes, radiolarian species occupy habitats at multiple latitudes, and depths throughout the world oceans. Thus, marine sediments from the tropics reflect a composite of several vertically stacked faunal assemblages, some of which are contiguous with higher latitude surface assemblages. Sediments beneath polar waters include cosmopolitan deep-water radiolarians, as well as high-latitude endemic surface water species. Stars in (a) indicate the latitudes sampled for this study, and the gray bars highlight the radiolarian assemblages included in each sedimentary composite. The horizontal purple bars indicate latitudes known for good radiolarian (silica) preservation, based on surface sediment composition.[3] Data show that some species were extirpated from high latitudes but persisted in the tropics during the late Neogene, either by migration or range restriction (b). With predicted global warming, modern Southern Ocean species will not be able to use migration or range contraction to escape environmental stressors, because their preferred cold-water habitats are disappearing from the globe (c). However, tropical endemic species may expand their ranges toward midlatitudes. The color polygons in all three panels represent generalized radiolarian biogeographic provinces, as well as their relative water mass temperatures (cooler colors indicate cooler temperatures, and vice versa). Globe image adapted from NASA Blue Marble: Next Generation imagery. Ocean floor bathymetry from Google EarthTM seafloor elevation profile (5°N–74°S, at 120°W).

1. Boltovskoy, D., Kling, S. A., Takahashi, K. & BjØrklund, K. World atlas of distribution of recent Polycystina (Radiolaria). Palaeontol. Electron. 13, 1–230 (2010). 2. Casey, R. E., Spaw, J. M., & Kunze, F. R. Polycystine radiolarian distribution and enhancements related to oceanographic conditions in a hypothetical ocean. Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol. Bull. 66, 319–332 (1982).

3. Lazarus, D. B. The deep-sea microfossil record of macroevolutionary change in plankton and its study. Geol. Soc. Spec. Publ. 358, 141–166 (2011).
Date
Source [1] doi:10.1038/s41467-020-18879-7
Author Sarah Trubovitz, David Lazarus, Johan Renaudie & Paula J. Noble

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Radiolarian biogeography with observed and predicted responses to temperature change

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