Geologically rapid climate change is anticipated to increase extinction risk non-uniformly across the Earth’s surface. Tropical species may be more vulnerable than temperate species to current climate warming because of high tropical climate velocities and reduced seawater oxygen levels. To test if rapid warming indeed preferentially increased the extinction risk of tropical fossil taxa, we combine a robust statistical assessment of latitudinal extinction selectivity (LES) with the dominant views on climate change occurring at ancient extinction crises. Using a global dataset of marine fossil occurrences, we assess extinction rates for tropical and temperate genera, applying log-ratios to assess effect size and Akaike weights for model supp...
Current predictions of extinction risks from climate change vary widely depending on the specific as...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Conservation of marine species requires the ability to predict the effects of climate-related stress...
Geologically rapid climate change is anticipated to increase extinction risk non-uniformly across th...
The end-Permian mass extinction occurred alongside a large swathe of environmental changes that are ...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
The Late Triassic and Early Toarcian extinction events are both associated with greenhouse warming e...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
Climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, especially to tropical species. Yet, wh...
The linkage between temperature change and extinction rates in the fossil record is well-known quali...
Studies of extinction in the fossil record commonly involve comparisons of taxonomic extinction rate...
Marine taxa are threatened by anthropogenic impacts, but knowledge of their extinction vulnerabiliti...
Mass extinction is a phenomenon in the history of life on Earth when a considerable number of specie...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Current predictions of extinction risks from climate change vary widely depending on the specific as...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Conservation of marine species requires the ability to predict the effects of climate-related stress...
Geologically rapid climate change is anticipated to increase extinction risk non-uniformly across th...
The end-Permian mass extinction occurred alongside a large swathe of environmental changes that are ...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
The Late Triassic and Early Toarcian extinction events are both associated with greenhouse warming e...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
Climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, especially to tropical species. Yet, wh...
The linkage between temperature change and extinction rates in the fossil record is well-known quali...
Studies of extinction in the fossil record commonly involve comparisons of taxonomic extinction rate...
Marine taxa are threatened by anthropogenic impacts, but knowledge of their extinction vulnerabiliti...
Mass extinction is a phenomenon in the history of life on Earth when a considerable number of specie...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Current predictions of extinction risks from climate change vary widely depending on the specific as...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Conservation of marine species requires the ability to predict the effects of climate-related stress...