The 29 extant species of pika currently recognized are: •
Order Lagomorpha The North American species migrated from Eurasia. They invaded the New World twice: •
O. spanglei during the latest Miocene or early Pliocene, followed by a roughly three-million-year-long gap in the known North American pika record The earliest one is
Desmatolagus (middle Eocene to Miocene, 42.5–14.8 Ma), usually included in the Ochotonidae, sometimes in
Leporidae or in neither ochotonid nor leporid stem-
lagomorphs. Ochotonids appeared in Asia between the late Eocene and the early Oligocene, and continued to develop along with increased distribution of
C3 grasses in previously forest dominated areas under the "climatic optimum" from the late Oligocene to middle Miocene. They thrived in Eurasia, North America, and even Africa. The peak of their diversity occurred during the period from the early Miocene to middle Miocene. Most of them became extinct during the transition from the Miocene to Pliocene, which was accompanied by an increase in diversity of the
leporids. It has been proposed that this switch between ochotonids and larger leporids was caused by expansion of
C4 plants (particularly the
Poaceae) related to global cooling in the late Miocene, since extant pikas reveal a strong preference for
C3 plants (
Asteraceae,
Rosaceae, and
Fabaceae, many of them C3). Replacement of large areas of forests by open grassland first started probably in North America and is called sometimes "nature's green revolution". ==Notes==