The end of the Pliocene marked the beginning of a period of great climatic variability and sea-level oscillations. Here, based on a new analysis of the fossil record, we identify a previously unrecognized extinction event among marine megafauna (mammals, seabirds, turtles and sharks) during this time, with extinction rates three times higher than in the rest of the Cenozoic, and with 36% of Pliocene genera failing to survive into the Pleistocene. To gauge the potential consequences of this event for ecosystem functioning, we evaluate its impacts on functional diversity, focusing on the 86% of the megafauna genera that are associated with coastal habitats. Seven (14%) coastal functional entities (unique trait combinations) disappeared, along...
Mass extinctions have fundamentally altered the structure of the biospherethroughout Earth’s history...
Whether mass extinctions and their associated recoveries represent an intensification of background ...
The end of the Pleistocene was marked by the extinction of almost all large land mammals worldwide e...
The end of the Pliocene marked the beginning of a period of great climatic variability and sea-level...
The end of the Pliocene marked the beginning of a period of great climatic variability and sea-level...
Abstract The worldwide extinction of megafauna during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene is evi...
Many aspects of climate affect the deployment of biodiversity in time and space, and so changes in c...
Controversy persists about why so many large-bodied mammal species went extinct around the end of th...
Loss of megafauna, an aspect of defaunation, can precipitate many ecological changes over short time...
Carcharocles megalodon ("Megalodon") is the largest shark that ever lived. Based on its distribution...
WOS:000528276800015International audienceMarine megafauna, the largest animals in the oceans, serve ...
International audienceThe geological record of marine animal biodiversity reflects the interplay bet...
Carcharocles megalodon (“Megalodon”) is the largest shark that ever lived. Based on its distribution...
The clade dynamics of marine animals have changed markedly over the Phanerozoic. Long-term diversifi...
International audienceHistorical patterns of species diversity inferred from phylogenies typically c...
Mass extinctions have fundamentally altered the structure of the biospherethroughout Earth’s history...
Whether mass extinctions and their associated recoveries represent an intensification of background ...
The end of the Pleistocene was marked by the extinction of almost all large land mammals worldwide e...
The end of the Pliocene marked the beginning of a period of great climatic variability and sea-level...
The end of the Pliocene marked the beginning of a period of great climatic variability and sea-level...
Abstract The worldwide extinction of megafauna during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene is evi...
Many aspects of climate affect the deployment of biodiversity in time and space, and so changes in c...
Controversy persists about why so many large-bodied mammal species went extinct around the end of th...
Loss of megafauna, an aspect of defaunation, can precipitate many ecological changes over short time...
Carcharocles megalodon ("Megalodon") is the largest shark that ever lived. Based on its distribution...
WOS:000528276800015International audienceMarine megafauna, the largest animals in the oceans, serve ...
International audienceThe geological record of marine animal biodiversity reflects the interplay bet...
Carcharocles megalodon (“Megalodon”) is the largest shark that ever lived. Based on its distribution...
The clade dynamics of marine animals have changed markedly over the Phanerozoic. Long-term diversifi...
International audienceHistorical patterns of species diversity inferred from phylogenies typically c...
Mass extinctions have fundamentally altered the structure of the biospherethroughout Earth’s history...
Whether mass extinctions and their associated recoveries represent an intensification of background ...
The end of the Pleistocene was marked by the extinction of almost all large land mammals worldwide e...