Mass extinctions can have dramatic effects on the trajectory of life, but in some cases the effects can be relatively small even when extinction rates are high. For example, the Late Ordovician mass extinction is the second most severe in terms of the proportion of genera eliminated, yet is noted for the lack of ecological consequences and shifts in clade dominance. By comparison, the end-Cretaceous mass extinction was less severe but eliminated several major clades while some rare surviving clades diversified in the Paleogene. This disconnect may be better understood by incorporating the phylogenetic relatedness of taxa into studies of mass extinctions, as the factors driving extinction and recovery are thought to be phylogenetically conse...
The morphological study of extinct taxa allows for analysis of a diverse set of macroevolutionary hy...
Mass extinction events are recognized by increases in extinction rate and magnitude and, often, by c...
Extinction risk in the modern world and extinction in the geological past are often linked to aspect...
Mass extinctions can have dramatic effects on the trajectory of life, but in some cases the effects ...
Mass extinctions can have dramatic effects on the trajectory of life, but in some cases the effects ...
Mass extinctions affect the history of life by decimating existing diversity and ecological structur...
<p>Only intervals with over 100 genera are included in this analysis, as sample sizes smaller than t...
The Late Ordovician mass extinction was an interval of high extinction with inferred low ecological ...
<p>Taxonomic clustering of A) extinctions and B) originations for brachiopod genera within superfami...
Extinction in the fossil record is most often measured by the percentage of taxa (species, genera, f...
A basic hypothesis in extinction theory predicts that more abundant taxa have an evolutionary advant...
Mass extinction events are recognized by increases in extinction rate and magnitude and, often, by c...
The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction (LOME) coincided with dramatic climate changes, but there are nu...
Determining which biological traits affect taxonomic durations is critical for explaining macroevolu...
The morphological study of extinct taxa allows for analysis of a diverse set of macroevolutionary hy...
Mass extinction events are recognized by increases in extinction rate and magnitude and, often, by c...
Extinction risk in the modern world and extinction in the geological past are often linked to aspect...
Mass extinctions can have dramatic effects on the trajectory of life, but in some cases the effects ...
Mass extinctions can have dramatic effects on the trajectory of life, but in some cases the effects ...
Mass extinctions affect the history of life by decimating existing diversity and ecological structur...
<p>Only intervals with over 100 genera are included in this analysis, as sample sizes smaller than t...
The Late Ordovician mass extinction was an interval of high extinction with inferred low ecological ...
<p>Taxonomic clustering of A) extinctions and B) originations for brachiopod genera within superfami...
Extinction in the fossil record is most often measured by the percentage of taxa (species, genera, f...
A basic hypothesis in extinction theory predicts that more abundant taxa have an evolutionary advant...
Mass extinction events are recognized by increases in extinction rate and magnitude and, often, by c...
The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction (LOME) coincided with dramatic climate changes, but there are nu...
Determining which biological traits affect taxonomic durations is critical for explaining macroevolu...
The morphological study of extinct taxa allows for analysis of a diverse set of macroevolutionary hy...
Mass extinction events are recognized by increases in extinction rate and magnitude and, often, by c...
Extinction risk in the modern world and extinction in the geological past are often linked to aspect...