True seals achieved global distribution by breaking Bergmann's rule.
James Patrick RuleFelix G MarxAlistair R EvansErich M G FitzgeraldJustin W AdamsPublished in: Evolution; international journal of organic evolution (2022)
True seals (phocids) have achieved a global distribution by crossing the equator multiple times in their evolutionary history. This is remarkable, as warm tropical waters are regarded as a barrier to marine mammal dispersal and-following Bergmann's rule-may have limited crossings to small-bodied species only. Here, we show that ancestral phocids were medium sized and did not obviously follow Bergmann's rule. Instead, they ranged across a broad spectrum of environmental temperatures, without undergoing shifts in temperature- or size-related evolutionary rates following dispersals across the equator. We conclude that the tropics have not constrained phocid biogeography.