1 research outputs found
Data Paper. Data Paper
<h2>File List</h2><blockquote>
<p>Data files are in ASCII format,
tab delimited. No compression schemes were used. Data set consists of 5732
records, not including header row.</p>
<p><a href="MOMv3.3.txt">MOMv3.3.txt</a></p>
</blockquote><h2>Description</h2><blockquote>
<p>The purpose of this data set was
to compile body mass information for all mammals on Earth so that we could
investigate the patterns of body mass seen across geographic and taxonomic
space and evolutionary time. We were interested in the heritability
of body size across taxonomic groups (How conserved is body mass within a
genus, family, and order?), in the overall pattern of body mass across continents
(Do the moments and other descriptive statistics remain the same across geographic
space?), and over evolutionary time (How quickly did body mass patterns iterate
on the patterns seen today? Were the Pleistocene extinctions size specific
on each continent, and did these events coincide with the arrival of man?).
These data are also part of a larger project that seeks to integrate body
mass patterns across very diverse taxa (NCEAS Working Group on Body size in
ecology and paleoecology: linking pattern and process across space,
time and taxonomic scales). We began with the updated version of Wilson
and Reeder’s (1993) taxonomic list of all known Recent mammals of the world
(<i>N</i> = 4629 species) to which we added status, distribution, and body
mass estimates compiled from the primary and secondary literature. Whenever
possible, we used an average of male and female body mass, which was in turn
averaged over multiple localities to arrive at our species body mass values.
The sources are line referenced in the main data set, with the actual references
appearing in a table within the metadata. Mammals have individual records
for each continent they occur on. Please note that our data set is more
than an amalgamation of smaller compilations. Although we relied heavily
a data set for Chiroptera by K. E. Jones (<i>N</i> = 905), the CRC handbook
of Mammalian Body Mass (<i>N</i> = 688), and a data set compiled for South
America by P. Marquet (<i>N</i> = 505), these total less than half the records
in the current database. The remainder are derived from more than 150
other sources (see reference table). Furthermore, we include a comprehensive
late Pleistocene species assemblage for Africa, North and South America, and
Australia (an additional 230 species). “Late Pleistocene” is defined as approximately
11 ka for Africa, North and South America, and as 50 ka for Australia, because
these times predate anthropogenic impacts on mammalian fauna. Estimates contained
within this data set represent a generalized species value, averaged across
gender and geographic space. Consequently, these data are not appropriate
for asking population-level questions where the integration of body mass with
specific environmental conditions is important. All extant orders of
mammals are included, as well as several archaic groups (<i>N</i> = 4859 species).
Because some species are found on more than one continent (particularly Chiroptera),
there are 5731 entries. We have body masses for the following:
Artiodactyla (280 records), Bibymalagasia (2 records), Carnivora (393 records),
Cetacea (75 records), Chiroptera (1071 records), Dasyuromorphia (67 records),
Dermoptera (3 records), Didelphimorphia (68 records), Diprotodontia (127 records),
Hydracoidea (5 records), Insectivora (234 records), Lagomorpha (53 records),
Litopterna (2 records), Macroscelidea (14 records), Microbiotheria (1 record),
Monotremata (7 records), Notoryctemorphia (1 record), Notoungulata (5 records),
Paucituberculata (5 records), Peramelemorphia (24 records), Perissodactyla
(47 records), Pholidota (8 records), Primates (276 records), Proboscidea (14
records), Rodentia (1425 records), Scandentia (15 records), Sirenia (6 records),
Tubulidentata (1 record), and Xenarthra (75 records). </p>
<p> <i>Key words</i>: <i>body mass;
extinct mammals; late Quaternary; macroecology; taxonomy.</i></p>
</blockquote