Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative relationship with geographic range across wide temporal and taxonomic scales, the effect has been difficult to disentangle from factors such as sampling, ecological niche, or clade. In addition, studies of extinction risk have focused on benthic invertebrates with less work on planktic taxa. We employed a global set of 1114 planktic graptolite species from the Ordovician to lower Devonian to analyze the predictive power of species’ traits and abiotic factors on extinction risk, combining general linear models (GLMs), partial least-squares regression (PLSR), and permutation tests. Factors included measures of geographic range, sampling, and graptolite-specific factors such...
Geographic ranges are estimated for brachiopod and bivalve species during the late Middle (mid-Givet...
Determining which biological traits affect taxonomic durations is critical for explaining macroevolu...
The geographic range sizes frequency distribution (RFD) within clades is typically right-skewed with...
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...
Extinction in the fossil record is most often measured by the percentage of taxa (species, genera, f...
Rates of extinction vary greatly through geological time, with losses particularly concentrated in m...
Rarity is widely used to predict the vulnerability of species to extinction. Species can be rare in ...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Besides helping to identify species traits that are commonly linked to extinction risk, the fossil r...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...
Geographic range is a good indicator of extinction susceptibility in fossil marine species and highe...
The morphological study of extinct taxa allows for analysis of a diverse set of macroevolutionary hy...
Geographic range is a good indicator of extinction susceptibility in fossil marine species and highe...
Genera by their very nature are expected to be monotypic and geographically and environmentally rest...
Geographic ranges are estimated for brachiopod and bivalve species during the late Middle (mid-Givet...
Determining which biological traits affect taxonomic durations is critical for explaining macroevolu...
The geographic range sizes frequency distribution (RFD) within clades is typically right-skewed with...
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...
Extinction in the fossil record is most often measured by the percentage of taxa (species, genera, f...
Rates of extinction vary greatly through geological time, with losses particularly concentrated in m...
Rarity is widely used to predict the vulnerability of species to extinction. Species can be rare in ...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Besides helping to identify species traits that are commonly linked to extinction risk, the fossil r...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...
Geographic range is a good indicator of extinction susceptibility in fossil marine species and highe...
The morphological study of extinct taxa allows for analysis of a diverse set of macroevolutionary hy...
Geographic range is a good indicator of extinction susceptibility in fossil marine species and highe...
Genera by their very nature are expected to be monotypic and geographically and environmentally rest...
Geographic ranges are estimated for brachiopod and bivalve species during the late Middle (mid-Givet...
Determining which biological traits affect taxonomic durations is critical for explaining macroevolu...
The geographic range sizes frequency distribution (RFD) within clades is typically right-skewed with...