Extinction risk assessments of marine invertebrate species remain scarce, which hinders effective management of marine biodiversity in the face of anthropogenic impacts. In order to close this information gap, we developed a metric of relative extinction risk that combines paleontological data, in the form of extinction rates calculated from the fossil record, with two known correlates of risk in the modern day: geographic range size and realized thermal niche. We test the performance of this metric - PERIL (Paleontological Extinction Risk In Lineages) - using survivorship analyses of Pliocene bivalve faunas from California and New Zealand, and then use it to identify present-day hotspots of extinction vulnerability for extant shallow-marin...
To better predict the ecological and evolutionary effects of the emerging biodiversity crisis in the...
Evolution, extinction, and dispersion are fundamental processes affecting marine biodiversity. Until...
Many aspects of climate affect the deployment of biodiversity in time and space, and so changes in c...
Besides helping to identify species traits that are commonly linked to extinction risk, the fossil r...
Rarity is widely used to predict the vulnerability of species to extinction. Species can be rare in ...
Marine taxa are threatened by anthropogenic impacts, but knowledge of their extinction vulnerabiliti...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
We assessed selective extinction patterns in bivalves during a late Neogene mass extinction event ob...
Data that accurately capture the spatial structure of biodiversity are required for many paleobiolog...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...
Bivalves are diverse and abundant constit-uents of modern marine faunas, and they have a rich fossil...
The probability that the at-risk species identified were locally extinct. Bayesian extinction analys...
Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative relationship with geographic r...
Two of the traits most often observed to correlate with extinction risk in marine animals are geogra...
Besides helping to identify species traits that are commonly linked to extinction risk, the fossil r...
To better predict the ecological and evolutionary effects of the emerging biodiversity crisis in the...
Evolution, extinction, and dispersion are fundamental processes affecting marine biodiversity. Until...
Many aspects of climate affect the deployment of biodiversity in time and space, and so changes in c...
Besides helping to identify species traits that are commonly linked to extinction risk, the fossil r...
Rarity is widely used to predict the vulnerability of species to extinction. Species can be rare in ...
Marine taxa are threatened by anthropogenic impacts, but knowledge of their extinction vulnerabiliti...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
We assessed selective extinction patterns in bivalves during a late Neogene mass extinction event ob...
Data that accurately capture the spatial structure of biodiversity are required for many paleobiolog...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...
Bivalves are diverse and abundant constit-uents of modern marine faunas, and they have a rich fossil...
The probability that the at-risk species identified were locally extinct. Bayesian extinction analys...
Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative relationship with geographic r...
Two of the traits most often observed to correlate with extinction risk in marine animals are geogra...
Besides helping to identify species traits that are commonly linked to extinction risk, the fossil r...
To better predict the ecological and evolutionary effects of the emerging biodiversity crisis in the...
Evolution, extinction, and dispersion are fundamental processes affecting marine biodiversity. Until...
Many aspects of climate affect the deployment of biodiversity in time and space, and so changes in c...