Extinction may alter competitive interactions among surviving species, affecting their subsequent recovery and evolution, but these processes remain poorly understood. Analysis of predation traces produced by shell-drilling muricid snails on bivalve prey reveals that species interactions were substantially different before and after a Plio-Pleistocene mass extinction in the western Atlantic. Muricids edge- and wall-drilled their prey in the Pliocene, but Pleistocene and Recent snails attacked prey only through the shell wall. Experiments with living animals suggest that intense competition induces muricid snails to attack shell edges. Pliocene predators, therefore, probably competed for resources more intensely than their post-extinction co...
In the last 40 years, there has been a dramatic increase in our knowledge about predator–prey intera...
Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecological...
with special reference to bivalve mollusks and mammals. Syst. Zool. 22: 486-506.—Rates of adaptive r...
Extinction may alter competitive interactions among surviving species, affecting their subsequent re...
Identifying gastropod predators from the morphology of their drill hole traces is an important step ...
Traces of durophagous predation on molluscan prey have been used as proxies to reconstruct the natur...
According to previous work along the western Atlantic Coastal Plain, 70% of molluscan species went e...
The fossil record of drilling predation has been widely used to study predator-prey interactions and...
Previous study of drilling predation on the bivalve Chione during the late Neogene of Florida sugges...
Incomplete drill holes in shelled invertebrate prey produced by predatory gastropods are often inter...
A morphometric discontinuity between species of the bivalve Chione during a Plio-Pleistocene extinct...
A regional mass extinction event in the late Neogene western Atlantic is widely thought to have gene...
Molluscan faunal turnover in the Plio ± Pleistocene of the tropical western Atlantic has been attrib...
The ecological impact of past extinction events is one of the central issues in paleobiology. In fac...
Paleoecological studies enhance our understanding of biotic responses to climate change because they...
In the last 40 years, there has been a dramatic increase in our knowledge about predator–prey intera...
Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecological...
with special reference to bivalve mollusks and mammals. Syst. Zool. 22: 486-506.—Rates of adaptive r...
Extinction may alter competitive interactions among surviving species, affecting their subsequent re...
Identifying gastropod predators from the morphology of their drill hole traces is an important step ...
Traces of durophagous predation on molluscan prey have been used as proxies to reconstruct the natur...
According to previous work along the western Atlantic Coastal Plain, 70% of molluscan species went e...
The fossil record of drilling predation has been widely used to study predator-prey interactions and...
Previous study of drilling predation on the bivalve Chione during the late Neogene of Florida sugges...
Incomplete drill holes in shelled invertebrate prey produced by predatory gastropods are often inter...
A morphometric discontinuity between species of the bivalve Chione during a Plio-Pleistocene extinct...
A regional mass extinction event in the late Neogene western Atlantic is widely thought to have gene...
Molluscan faunal turnover in the Plio ± Pleistocene of the tropical western Atlantic has been attrib...
The ecological impact of past extinction events is one of the central issues in paleobiology. In fac...
Paleoecological studies enhance our understanding of biotic responses to climate change because they...
In the last 40 years, there has been a dramatic increase in our knowledge about predator–prey intera...
Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecological...
with special reference to bivalve mollusks and mammals. Syst. Zool. 22: 486-506.—Rates of adaptive r...