Species selection has received a great deal of theoretical attention but it has rarely been empirically tested. It is important to determine the level of selection that operated during a particular extinction event because it can help distinguish between traits that were actually responsible for extinction and those that were merely correlated with it. Here, we present a test that can help distinguish between organismal and species-level selection, which we demonstrate using the high-resolution fossil record of planktonic foraminifera species recorded in deep-sea sediment cores. Our test examines the fate of survivors and victims during the Cretaceous/Paleogene (K/Pg) mass extinction within single geographic regions, where all individuals ...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Size is among the most important traits of any organism, yet the factors that control its evolution ...
Extinction is a remarkably difficult phenomenon to study under natural conditions. This is because t...
Species selection has received a great deal of theoretical attention but it has rarely been empirica...
For a survivorship curve to show a meaningful pattern, it is essential that a suitably homogeneous g...
The taxonomic and ecologic composition of Earth’s biota has shifted dramatically through geologic ti...
The end-Permian mass extinction occurred alongside a large swathe of environmental changes that are ...
Genera by their very nature are expected to be monotypic and geographically and environmentally rest...
The Earth is currently experiencing rates of environmental change unprecedented in the last 66 milli...
The earliest Paleocene record of calcareous nannoplankton presents a unique opportunity to understan...
Unless they adapt, populations facing persistent stress are threatened by extinction. Theoretically,...
To what extent can natural selection act on groupings above the species level? Despite extensive the...
Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative relationship with geographic r...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
ABSTRACT: Over 100 cosmopolitan species of deep-sea benthic foraminifera (Extinction Group, Ext. Gp)...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Size is among the most important traits of any organism, yet the factors that control its evolution ...
Extinction is a remarkably difficult phenomenon to study under natural conditions. This is because t...
Species selection has received a great deal of theoretical attention but it has rarely been empirica...
For a survivorship curve to show a meaningful pattern, it is essential that a suitably homogeneous g...
The taxonomic and ecologic composition of Earth’s biota has shifted dramatically through geologic ti...
The end-Permian mass extinction occurred alongside a large swathe of environmental changes that are ...
Genera by their very nature are expected to be monotypic and geographically and environmentally rest...
The Earth is currently experiencing rates of environmental change unprecedented in the last 66 milli...
The earliest Paleocene record of calcareous nannoplankton presents a unique opportunity to understan...
Unless they adapt, populations facing persistent stress are threatened by extinction. Theoretically,...
To what extent can natural selection act on groupings above the species level? Despite extensive the...
Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative relationship with geographic r...
Many modern extinction drivers are shared with past mass extinction events, such as rapid climate wa...
ABSTRACT: Over 100 cosmopolitan species of deep-sea benthic foraminifera (Extinction Group, Ext. Gp)...
Perhaps the most pressing issue in predicting biotic responses to present and future global change i...
Size is among the most important traits of any organism, yet the factors that control its evolution ...
Extinction is a remarkably difficult phenomenon to study under natural conditions. This is because t...