A major macroevolutionary question concerns how long-term patterns of body-size evolution are underpinned by smaller scale processes along lineages. One outstanding long-term transition is the replacement of basal therapsids (stem-group mammals) by archosauromorphs, including dinosaurs, as the dominant large-bodied terrestrial fauna during the Triassic (approx. 252–201 million years ago). This landmark event preceded more than 150 million years of archosauromorph dominance. We analyse a new body-size dataset of more than 400 therapsid and archosauromorph species spanning the Late Permian–Middle Jurassic. Maximum-likelihood analyses indicate that Cope's rule (an active within-lineage trend of body-size increase) is extremely rare, despite co...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
A major macroevolutionary question concerns how long-term patterns of body-size evolution are underp...
A major macroevolutionary question concerns how long-term patterns of body-size evolution are underp...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating ex...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating e...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating ex...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating ex...
An important parameter in studying the macroevolutionary history of a clade is the variation of its ...
Background: Little is known about the long-term patterns of body size evolution in Crocodylomorpha, ...
PMCID: PMC3526529This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons ...
The notion that large body size confers some intrinsic advantage to biological species has been deba...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
A major macroevolutionary question concerns how long-term patterns of body-size evolution are underp...
A major macroevolutionary question concerns how long-term patterns of body-size evolution are underp...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating ex...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating e...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating ex...
The largest known dinosaurs weighed at least 20 million times as much as the smallest, indicating ex...
An important parameter in studying the macroevolutionary history of a clade is the variation of its ...
Background: Little is known about the long-term patterns of body size evolution in Crocodylomorpha, ...
PMCID: PMC3526529This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons ...
The notion that large body size confers some intrinsic advantage to biological species has been deba...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...
Cope's rule is the trend toward increasing body size in a lineage over geological time. The rule has...