Phylogenetic diversification and climate change in the Cenozoic

The ability of lineages to adapt to changing environmental conditions crucially depends on changes of the species' ecological niche, but little is known about the triggers and rates of these changes. The aim of this project is to understand how species' ecological niches evolve across spatial and temporal scales. We combine phylogenetic and biogeographic information for different groups of organisms (plants and animals) with climatic data and develop new analyses tools to assess whether climate change has been a major driver of diversification in the Cenozoic. Datasets include dated species-level molecular phylogenetic reconstructions based on DNA sequences from several plastid and nuclear regions as well as high-resolution georeferenced distribution data and information on various ecological traits. Analyses focus on the assessment of diversification rates, species distribution modeling, and phylogenetic reconstructions of ancestral climatic niches. Temporal coverage: Cenozoic

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Data and Resources

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Additional Info

Field Value
Geographic coverage
Geographic description Southern Africa, West Africa, South America, Southeast Asia
Bounding coordinates
North: 16.875
West: -85.375
East: 127.125
South: -61.125
Other info
Last Updated December 17, 2020, 15:41 (UTC)
Created December 17, 2020, 15:41 (UTC)

Responsible parties

Creator
Name Jan Schnitzler
Organization affiliations
Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK-F)

Role

Contact
Name Jan Schnitzler
E-mail
Organization affiliations
Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK-F)

Research data management planning

Data will be stored at (long-term archived) Information still missing

Link to this dataset:

https://dataportal.senckenberg.de/dataset/5168f0f4-e358-467c-b69f-7fdecabebd5b