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Late Cretaceous ammonoids show that drivers of diversification are regionally heterogeneous.
Flannery-Sutherland, Joseph T; Crossan, Cameron D; Myers, Corinne E; Hendy, Austin J W; Landman, Neil H; Witts, James D.
Afiliação
  • Flannery-Sutherland JT; School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Science, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK. j.t.flannerysutherland@bham.ac.uk.
  • Crossan CD; Palaeobiology Research Group, School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK. j.t.flannerysutherland@bham.ac.uk.
  • Myers CE; Palaeobiology Research Group, School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
  • Hendy AJW; Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
  • Landman NH; Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
  • Witts JD; Division of Paleontology (Invertebrates), American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, USA.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 5382, 2024 Jun 27.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38937471
ABSTRACT
Palaeontologists have long sought to explain the diversification of individual clades to whole biotas at global scales. Advances in our understanding of the spatial distribution of the fossil record through geological time, however, has demonstrated that global trends in biodiversity were a mosaic of regionally heterogeneous diversification processes. Drivers of diversification must presumably have also displayed regional variation to produce the spatial disparities observed in past taxonomic richness. Here, we analyse the fossil record of ammonoids, pelagic shelled cephalopods, through the Late Cretaceous, characterised by some palaeontologists as an interval of biotic decline prior to their total extinction at the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary. We regionally subdivide this record to eliminate the impacts of spatial sampling biases and infer regional origination and extinction rates corrected for temporal sampling biases using Bayesian methods. We then model these rates using biotic and abiotic drivers commonly inferred to influence diversification. Ammonoid diversification dynamics and responses to this common set of diversity drivers were regionally heterogeneous, do not support ecological decline, and demonstrate that their global diversification signal is influenced by spatial disparities in sampling effort. These results call into question the feasibility of seeking drivers of diversity at global scales in the fossil record.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Teorema de Bayes / Biodiversidade / Cefalópodes / Extinção Biológica / Fósseis Limite: Animals Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Teorema de Bayes / Biodiversidade / Cefalópodes / Extinção Biológica / Fósseis Limite: Animals Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article