Macroevolution focuses on patterns and processes occurring above the level of species and over geological timescales (Raia, 2016). Investigating diversification processes, both morphological and taxonomical, gives a chance to answer important questions in evolutionary biology. Why do some clades have more species than others? Why do some groups undergo striking adaptive radiations, but others persist for millions of years as living fossils? Why do some groups have much more ecological or morphological diversity than others? Does anything limit the number of species on earth and what? These complex questions share a common underlying feature: all, to some degree, concern rates of macroevolutionary change that occur across geological timescal...