Although morphological variation is known to influence the evolutionary fates of species, the relationship between morphological variation and survivorship in the face of extinction-inducing perturbations is poorly understood. Here, we investigate this relationship for veneroid bivalves in association with the Plio-Pleistocene extinction in Florida. Fourteen pairs of related species were selected for analysis, with each pair including one species that survived the Plio-Pleistocene extinction and another that became extinct during the interval. Morphological landmark data were acquired for more than 1500 museum specimens, representing 19 localities that encompass four well-known Plio-Pleistocene units in the study region. Procrustes supe...
Species selection has received a great deal of theoretical attention but it has rarely been empirica...
Late Cenozoic bivalve extinction in the North Atlantic area has been attributed to environmental det...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...
Although morphological variation is known to influence the evolutionary fates of species, the relati...
Although morphological variation is known to influence the evolutionary fates of species, the relati...
We assessed selective extinction patterns in bivalves during a late Neogene mass extinction event ob...
The ecological impact of past extinction events is one of the central issues in paleobiology. In fac...
Predicting the capacity of a lineage to survive, disperse, or diversify when faced with a changing e...
Despite major advances, evolutionary theory still has numerous shortcomings in terms of fully unders...
The fossil record is the only direct source of data for studying modes (patterns) and rates of morph...
Data that accurately capture the spatial structure of biodiversity are required for many paleobiolog...
An organism\u27s body size entails both physiological and ecological costs. Furthermore, as a parame...
Bivalves are diverse and abundant constit-uents of modern marine faunas, and they have a rich fossil...
Rarity is widely used to predict the vulnerability of species to extinction. Species can be rare in ...
Extinction risk assessments of marine invertebrate species remain scarce, which hinders effective ma...
Species selection has received a great deal of theoretical attention but it has rarely been empirica...
Late Cenozoic bivalve extinction in the North Atlantic area has been attributed to environmental det...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...
Although morphological variation is known to influence the evolutionary fates of species, the relati...
Although morphological variation is known to influence the evolutionary fates of species, the relati...
We assessed selective extinction patterns in bivalves during a late Neogene mass extinction event ob...
The ecological impact of past extinction events is one of the central issues in paleobiology. In fac...
Predicting the capacity of a lineage to survive, disperse, or diversify when faced with a changing e...
Despite major advances, evolutionary theory still has numerous shortcomings in terms of fully unders...
The fossil record is the only direct source of data for studying modes (patterns) and rates of morph...
Data that accurately capture the spatial structure of biodiversity are required for many paleobiolog...
An organism\u27s body size entails both physiological and ecological costs. Furthermore, as a parame...
Bivalves are diverse and abundant constit-uents of modern marine faunas, and they have a rich fossil...
Rarity is widely used to predict the vulnerability of species to extinction. Species can be rare in ...
Extinction risk assessments of marine invertebrate species remain scarce, which hinders effective ma...
Species selection has received a great deal of theoretical attention but it has rarely been empirica...
Late Cenozoic bivalve extinction in the North Atlantic area has been attributed to environmental det...
Ecological theory predicts an inverse association between population size and extinction risk, but m...