Turtles are key components of modern vertebrate faunas and it is predicted that their diversity and distributions will be affected by anthropogenic climate change. Despite this, few studies have attempted to provide baseline data on turtle taxonomic richness through time or assess their past responses to global environmental change. We used the extensive Triassic–Palaeogene (252–23 Ma) fossil record of terrestrial and freshwater turtles to investigate diversity patterns, finding substantial variation in richness through time and between continents. Subsampled turtle richness was low globally from their Triassic origin until the Late Jurassic. There is strong evidence for high richness in the earliest Cretaceous of Europe. Richness was espec...
Molecular analyses of turtle relationships have overturned prevailing morphological hypotheses and p...
A number of means, including forelimb proportions and shell bone histology have been used to infer t...
Investigating species’ distribution and abundance over time is central to evolutionary biology, and ...
Turtles are key components of modern vertebrate faunas and their diversity and distributions are lik...
Living turtles are characterized by extraordinarily low species diversity given their age. The clade...
For many species, climate oscillations drove cycles of population contraction during cool glacial pe...
Evolutionary transitions to marine habitats occurred frequently among Mesozoic reptiles. Only one su...
We live in a time of highly accelerated extinction, which has the potential to mirror past mass exti...
Turtles are a major group of reptiles with moderate species richness (335 extant species) but high e...
Expanding the scope of landscape genetics beyond the level of single species can help to reveal how ...
Chelonians are ectothermic, with an extensive fossil record preserved in diverse palaeoenvironmental...
Organismal parts are often involved in the performance of more than one function. The role of trade...
In wide-ranging taxa with historically dynamic ranges, past allopatric isolation and range expansion...
Pleistocene environmental changes are generally assumed to have dramatically affected species’ demog...
Turtles are frequently found in fluviatile to lagoonal and shallow marine sediments in the Upper Jur...
Molecular analyses of turtle relationships have overturned prevailing morphological hypotheses and p...
A number of means, including forelimb proportions and shell bone histology have been used to infer t...
Investigating species’ distribution and abundance over time is central to evolutionary biology, and ...
Turtles are key components of modern vertebrate faunas and their diversity and distributions are lik...
Living turtles are characterized by extraordinarily low species diversity given their age. The clade...
For many species, climate oscillations drove cycles of population contraction during cool glacial pe...
Evolutionary transitions to marine habitats occurred frequently among Mesozoic reptiles. Only one su...
We live in a time of highly accelerated extinction, which has the potential to mirror past mass exti...
Turtles are a major group of reptiles with moderate species richness (335 extant species) but high e...
Expanding the scope of landscape genetics beyond the level of single species can help to reveal how ...
Chelonians are ectothermic, with an extensive fossil record preserved in diverse palaeoenvironmental...
Organismal parts are often involved in the performance of more than one function. The role of trade...
In wide-ranging taxa with historically dynamic ranges, past allopatric isolation and range expansion...
Pleistocene environmental changes are generally assumed to have dramatically affected species’ demog...
Turtles are frequently found in fluviatile to lagoonal and shallow marine sediments in the Upper Jur...
Molecular analyses of turtle relationships have overturned prevailing morphological hypotheses and p...
A number of means, including forelimb proportions and shell bone histology have been used to infer t...
Investigating species’ distribution and abundance over time is central to evolutionary biology, and ...