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Dive into the research topics where Corinne E. Myers is active.

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Featured researches published by Corinne E. Myers.


Paleobiology | 2014

The Generification of the Fossil Record

Jonathan R. Hendricks; Erin E. Saupe; Corinne E. Myers; Elizabeth J. Hermsen; Warren D. Allmon

Abstract Many modern paleobiological analyses are conducted at the generic level, a practice predicated on the validity of genera as meaningful proxies for species. Uncritical application of genera in such analyses, however, has led—perhaps inadvertently—to the unjustified reification of genera in an evolutionary context. While the utility of genera as proxies for species in evolutionary studies should be evaluated as an empirical issue, in practice it is increasingly assumed (rather than demonstrated) that genera are suitable proxies for species. This is problematic on both ontological and epistemological grounds. Genera are arbitrarily circumscribed, non-equivalent, often paraphyletic, and sometimes polyphyletic collections of species. They are useful tools for communication but have no theoretical or biological reality of their own and, whether monophyletic or not, cannot themselves operate in the evolutionary process. Attributes considered important for understanding macroevolution—e.g., geographic ranges, niche breadths, and taxon durations—are frequently variable among species within genera and will be inflated at the generic level, especially in species-rich genera. Consequently, the meaning(s) of results attained at the generic level may not “trickle down” in any obvious way that elucidates our understanding of evolution at the species level. Ideally, then, evolutionary studies that are actually about species should be pursued using species-level data rather than proxy data tabulated using genera. Where genera are used, greater critical attention should be focused on the degree to which attributes tabulated at the generic level reflect biological properties and processes at the species level.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2011

Sharks that pass in the night: using Geographical Information Systems to investigate competition in the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway

Corinne E. Myers; Bruce S. Lieberman

One way the effects of both ecology and environment on species can be observed in the fossil record is as changes in geographical distribution and range size. The prevalence of competitive interactions and species replacements in the fossil record has long been investigated and many evolutionary perspectives, including those of Darwin, have emphasized the importance of competitive interactions that ultimately lead one species to replace another. However, evidence for such phenomena in the fossil record is not always manifest. Here we use new quantitative analytical techniques based on Geographical Information Systems and PaleoGIS tectonic reconstructions to consider this issue in greater detail. The abundant, well-preserved fossil marine vertebrates of the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway of North America provide the component data for this study. Statistical analysis of distributional and range size changes in taxa confirms earlier ideas that the relative frequency of competitive replacement in the fossil record is limited to non-existent. It appears that typically, environmental gradients played the primary role in determining species distributions, with competitive interactions playing a more minor role.


Paleobiology | 2013

Greenhouse biogeography: the relationship of geographic range to invasion and extinction in the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway

Corinne E. Myers; Richard A. MacKenzie; Bruce S. Lieberman

Abstract Significant warming of Earths climate in the near term seems increasingly likely. If significant enough, this climatic regime could, in the long term, come to resemble previous greenhouse intervals in earth history. Consequently, analysis of the fossil record during periods of extreme warmth may provide important lessons for species biology, including biogeography, in a much warmer world. To explore this issue, we analyzed the biogeographic response of 63 molluscan species to the long-term global warmth in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway (WIS) of North America, using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to quantitatively measure changes in range size and distribution throughout this interval. We specifically considered the role that geographic range size played in mediating extinction resistance and invasion potential of these WIS species. We found no relationship between geographic range size and survivorship. However, endemic species with small range sizes were more likely to become invasive. Finally, mollusks did not experience a poleward shift in range out of the tropics during this warm regime. To the extent that these patterns are representative, and the WIS and taxa considered constitute a reasonable ancient analogue to a warmer future world, these results suggest that some biogeographic “rules” may not prevail under greenhouse conditions of long-term, equable warmth. They also suggest that other factors beyond geographic range size, including distinctive niche characteristics, may play quite important roles in species survival and invasion potential. This potentially complicates predictions regarding the future responses of extant species to long-term warming.


The American Naturalist | 2016

Impacts of Niche Breadth and Dispersal Ability on Macroevolutionary Patterns.

Huijie Qiao; Erin E. Saupe; Jorge Soberón; A. Townsend Peterson; Corinne E. Myers

We describe a spatially explicit simulation experiment designed to assess relative impacts of macroecological traits on patterns of biological diversification under changing environmental conditions. Using a simulation framework, we assessed impacts of species’ niche breadth (i.e., the range of their abiotic tolerances) and dispersal ability on resulting patterns of speciation and extinction and evaluated how these traits, in conjunction with environmental change, shape biological diversification. Simulation results supported both niche breadth and dispersal ability as important drivers of diversification in the face of environmental change, and suggested that the rate of environmental change influences how species interact with the extrinsic environment to generate diversity. Niche breadth had greater effects on speciation and extinction than dispersal ability when climate changed rapidly, whereas dispersal ability effects were elevated when climate changed slowly. Our simulations provide a bottom-up perspective on the generation and maintenance of diversity under climate change, offering a better understanding of potential interactions between species’ intrinsic macroecological characteristics and a dynamic extrinsic environment in the process of biological diversification.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2017

Pyrite-walled tube structures in a Mesoproterozoic sediment-hosted metal sulfide deposit

Theodore M. Present; Kristin D. Bergmann; Corinne E. Myers; Sarah P. Slotznick; Jessica R. Creveling; Jerry Zieg; Woodward W. Fischer; Andrew H. Knoll; John P. Grotzinger

Unusual decimeter-scale structures occur in the sediment-hosted Black Butte Copper Mine Project deposit within lower Mesoproterozoic strata of the Belt Supergroup, Montana. These low domal and stratiform lenses are made up of millimeter-scale, hollow or mineral-filled tubes bounded by pyrite walls. X-ray micro−computed tomography (micro-CT) shows that the tube structures are similar to the porous fabric of modern diffuse hydrothermal vents, and they do not resemble textures associated with the mineralization of known microbial communities. We determined the sulfur isotopic composition of sulfide minerals with in situ secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and of texture-specific sulfate phases with multicollector−inductively coupled plasma−mass spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS). The sedimentological setting, ore paragenesis, sulfur isotope systematics, and porosity structure of these porous precipitates constrain the site of their formation to above the sediment-water interface where metalliferous hydrothermal fluids vented into the overlying water column. These data constrain the geochemistry of the Mesoproterozoic sediment-water interface and the site of deposition for copper-cobalt-silver mineralization. Metals in the hydrothermal fluids titrated sulfide in seawater to create tortuous fluid-flow conduits. Pyrite that precipitated at the vent sites exhibits large sulfur isotope fractionation (>50‰), which indicates a close association between the vents and sulfate-reducing microbiota. In the subsurface, base metal sulfides precipitated from sulfide formed during the reduction of early diagenetic barite, also ultimately derived from seawater. This model suggests dynamic bottom-water redox conditions at the vent site driven by the interplay between sulfate-reducing organisms and metalliferous fluid effluence.


Frontiers of biogeography | 2016

A second horizon scan of biogeography: Golden Ages, Midas touches, and the Red Queen

Michael N Dawson; Jan C. Axmacher; Carl Beierkuhnlein; Jessica L. Blois; Bethany A. Bradley; Anna F. Cord; Jürgen Dengler; Kate S. He; Lawrence R. Heaney; Roland Jansson; Miguel D. Mahecha; Corinne E. Myers; David Nogués-Bravo; Anna Papadopoulou; Björn Reu; Francisco Rodríguez-Sánchez; Manuel J. Steinbauer; Alycia L. Stigall; Mao-Ning Tuanmu; Daniel G. Gavin

Are we entering a new ‘Golden Age’ of biogeography, with continued development of infrastructure and ideas? We highlight recent developments, and the challenges and opportunities they bring, in light of the snapshot provided by the 7th biennial meeting of the International Biogeography Society (IBS 2015). We summarize themes in and across 15 symposia using narrative analysis and word clouds, which we complement with recent publication trends and ‘research fronts’. We find that biogeography is still strongly defined by core sub-disciplines that reflect its origins in botanical, zoological (particularly bird and mammal), and geographic (e.g., island, montane) studies of the 1800s. That core is being enriched by large datasets (e.g. of environmental variables, ‘omics’, species’ occurrences, traits) and new techniques (e.g., advances in genetics, remote sensing, modeling) that promote studies with increasing detail and at increasing scales; disciplinary breadth is being diversified (e.g., by developments in paleobiogeography and microbiology) and integrated through the transfer of approaches and sharing of theory (e.g., spatial modeling and phylogenetics in evolutionary–ecological contexts). Yet some subdisciplines remain on the fringe (e.g., marine biogeography, deep-time paleobiogeography), new horizons and new theory may be overshadowed by popular techniques (e.g., species distribution modelling), and hypotheses, data, and analyses may each be wanting. Trends in publication suggest a shift away from traditional biogeography journals to multidisciplinary or open access journals. Thus, there are currently many opportunities and challenges as biogeography increasingly addresses human impacts on, and stewardship of, the planet (e.g., Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services). As in the past, biogeographers doubtless will continue to be engaged by new data and methods in exploring the nexus between biology and geography for decades into the future. But golden ages come and go, and they need not touch every domain in a discipline nor affect subdisciplines at the same time; moreover, what appears to be a Golden Age may sometimes have an undesirable ‘Midas touch’. Contexts within and outwith biogeography—e.g., methods, knowledge, climate, biodiversity, politics—are continually changing, and at times it can be challenging to establish or maintain relevance. In so many races with the Red Queen, we suggest that biogeography will enjoy greatest success if we also increasingly engage with the epistemology of our discipline.


Ecological Modelling | 2013

Constraints on interpretation of ecological niche models by limited environmental ranges on calibration areas

Hannah L. Owens; Lindsay P. Campbell; L. Lynnette Dornak; Erin E. Saupe; Narayani Barve; Jorge Soberón; Kate Ingenloff; Andrés Lira-Noriega; Christopher M. Hensz; Corinne E. Myers; A. Townsend Peterson


Ecological Modelling | 2012

Variation in niche and distribution model performance: The need for a priori assessment of key causal factors

Erin E. Saupe; Vijay Barve; Corinne E. Myers; Jorge Soberón; Narayani Barve; Christopher M. Hensz; At Peterson; Hannah L. Owens; Andrés Lira-Noriega


Palaeontology | 2013

A macroevolutionary expansion of the modern synthesis and the importance of extrinsic abiotic factors

Corinne E. Myers; Erin E. Saupe


Paleobiology | 2015

PaleoENM: applying ecological niche modeling to the fossil record

Corinne E. Myers; Alycia L. Stigall; Bruce S. Lieberman

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Kristin D. Bergmann

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Chang-Yu Sun

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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