- Wed Feb 15, 2017 2:20 pm
#32747
The idea here, Chica, is that the Amazon may not have had as stable a climate as previously thought, and climatic instability tends to lead to two things - extinctions and adaptations. In the Amazon, though, it rarely led to extinctions because even when the lowland climate changed, the upper regions remained stable, and so species that had been spread all around avoided extinction in those upper areas. Meanwhile, down in the dry lowlands, adaptations happened, accounting for the rich diversity of species found in the Amazon.
In order for this explanation to make sense, the dry periods need to have happened more than just once or twice. Otherwise, they wouldn't account for a lot of adaptations (speciation). Since we know that there is a lot of speciation/diversity in the Amazon, for this unstable climate/ice age dry spots theory to work there must have been a lot of these dry periods. That's what this info is about - telling us that it happened often enough, instead of just once of twice, to account for the rich diversity of species in the Amazon.
So it's not just about those lines you cited, but about the passage as a whole. The information that these ice ages occurred so many times helps support the overall thesis that diversity in the Amazon is not due to a stable climate, but due to a changing climate. If there had only been one or two ice ages, the argument would be much less persuasive. See how that works?
Keep at it, you'll get there!
Adam M. Tyson
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