Global climate change and its impact on biodiversity levels have made extinction a relevant topic in biological research. Yet, until recently, extinction has received less attention in macroevolutionary studies than speciation; the reason is the difficulty to infer an event that actually eliminates rather than creates new taxa. For example, in biogeography, extinction has often been seen as noise, introducing homoplasy in biogeographic relationships, rather than a pattern-generating process. The molecular revolution and the possibility to integrate time into phylogenetic reconstructions have allowed studying extinction under different perspectives. Here, we review phylogenetic (temporal) and biogeographic (spatial) approaches to the inferen...
Methods in historical biogeography have revolutionized our ability to infer the evolution of ancestr...
Abstract Estimating time-dependent rates of speciation and extinction from dated phylogenet...
In disciplines such as macroevolution that are not amenable to experimentation, scientists usually r...
Global climate change and its impact on biodiversity levels have made extinction a relevant topic in...
Aim Landmasses have been continuously modified by tectonic activity, the breakup and collision of la...
International audienceEstimating time-dependent rates of speciation and extinction from dated phylog...
Abstract.—Current models of diversification with evolving speciation rates have trouble mimicking th...
Measuring the pace at which speciation and extinction occur is fundamental to understanding the orig...
Documenting extinction phenomena remains a vital topic in palaeontology, especially in the context o...
Mass extinctions are defined by extinction rates significantly above background levels and have had ...
Aim In the most widely used family of methods for ancestral range estimation (ARE), dispersal, speci...
Methods in historical biogeography have revolutionized our ability to infer the evolution of ancestr...
Abstract Estimating time-dependent rates of speciation and extinction from dated phylogenet...
In disciplines such as macroevolution that are not amenable to experimentation, scientists usually r...
Global climate change and its impact on biodiversity levels have made extinction a relevant topic in...
Aim Landmasses have been continuously modified by tectonic activity, the breakup and collision of la...
International audienceEstimating time-dependent rates of speciation and extinction from dated phylog...
Abstract.—Current models of diversification with evolving speciation rates have trouble mimicking th...
Measuring the pace at which speciation and extinction occur is fundamental to understanding the orig...
Documenting extinction phenomena remains a vital topic in palaeontology, especially in the context o...
Mass extinctions are defined by extinction rates significantly above background levels and have had ...
Aim In the most widely used family of methods for ancestral range estimation (ARE), dispersal, speci...
Methods in historical biogeography have revolutionized our ability to infer the evolution of ancestr...
Abstract Estimating time-dependent rates of speciation and extinction from dated phylogenet...
In disciplines such as macroevolution that are not amenable to experimentation, scientists usually r...