A paleontological perspective on ecosystem assembly rules in the Paleozoic terrestrial realm

William A. DiMichele, Carol L. Hotton, Conrad C. Labandeira, Hans-Dieter Sues
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Abstract

The principles of ecosystem and community assembly developed by modern ecologists should be, in principle, applicable to the evolutionary assembly of terrestrial ecosystems during the Paleozoic. There are three broad, general, not time-specific Assembly Rules that have been described by ecologists: dispersal constraints (i.e., can a species reach a given location?), environmental constraints (i.e., if it can reach the location, can a species survive under the prevailing physical conditions there?), and biotic constraints (i.e, once on site, can a species co-exist with or compete successfully against occupants, if any?). These three constraints are, in fact, filters, and function to mediate the process of evolution, selection acting only as a passive arbiter of variation. A paleontological perspective adds consideration of irreducible historical contingency that invisibly, unless explicitly considered, affects the detailed manifestation of the other three; this also can be and has been accessed to some degree via considerations of phylogeny. An explicitly ecological perspective provides a framework to conceptualize the development of early ecosystems via the evolutionary addition of plant-based architectural complexity and the addition of the fungal, arthropod, and vertebrate components. For long-term patterns, such as the increase in structural complexity of vegetation through the Devonian and Carboniferous, assembly rules help to explain long lag times between the origin of innovations and their rise to widespread prominence. For individual paleocommunities, they help to resolve questions of biodiversity - whether the taxonomic record of an assemblage is oversplit or overlumped, for example. That evolution takes place within the framework of ecology is undisputed. But what exactly is that framework? At the most basic level, it is assembly rules.

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古生代陆域生态系统组合规律的古生物学视角
现代生态学家提出的生态系统和群落组合原理,原则上也适用于古生代陆地生态系统的进化组合。生态学家描述了三种广泛的、一般的、不特定于时间的组装规则:扩散约束(即,一个物种能到达一个给定的位置吗?),环境约束(即,如果它能到达那个位置,一个物种能在那里的主要物理条件下生存吗?)和生物约束(即,一旦到达一个地点,一个物种能否与居住者共存或成功地竞争,如果有的话?)。事实上,这三种约束是过滤器,它们的作用是调节进化过程,选择只是作为变异的被动仲裁者。古生物学的观点增加了对不可简化的历史偶然性的考虑,除非加以明确考虑,否则这种偶然性无形地影响着其他三者的详细表现;在某种程度上,这也可以通过系统发育的考虑来实现。一个明确的生态学视角提供了一个框架,通过植物为基础的建筑复杂性的进化添加以及真菌、节肢动物和脊椎动物成分的添加,来概念化早期生态系统的发展。对于长期模式,如泥盆纪和石炭纪植被结构复杂性的增加,组合规则有助于解释创新的起源和它们的广泛突出之间的长滞后时间。对于单个的古群落,它们有助于解决生物多样性的问题——例如,一个组合的分类记录是否被过度分割或过度集中。进化是在生态学的框架内发生的,这是无可争议的。但是这个框架到底是什么呢?在最基本的层面上,它是汇编规则。
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