Version 13

Data from: Mass extinctions alter extinction and origination dynamics with respect to body size

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Monarrez, Pedro;Heim, Noel;Payne, Jonathan

Description

Whether mass extinctions and their associated recoveries represent an intensification of background extinction and origination dynamics versus a separate macroevolutionary regime remains a central debate in evolutionary biology. Previous focus has been on extinction, but origination dynamics may be equally or more important for long-term evolutionary outcomes. The evolution of animal body size is an ideal process to test for differences in macroevolutionary regimes, as body size is easily determined, comparable across distantly related taxa, and scales with organismal traits. Here, we test for shifts in selectivity between background intervals and the “Big Five” mass extinction events using capture-mark-recapture models. Our body-size data cover 10,203 fossil marine animal genera spanning 10 Linnaean classes with occurrences ranging from Early Ordovician to Late Pleistocene (485–1 Mya). Most classes exhibit differences in both origination and extinction selectivity between background intervals and mass extinctions, with the direction of selectivity varying among classes and overall exhibiting stronger selectivity during origination after mass extinction than extinction during mass extinction. Thus, not only do mass extinction events shift the marine biosphere into a new macroevolutionary regime, the dynamics of recovery from mass extinction also appear to play an underappreciated role in shaping the biosphere in their aftermath.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

2.0

FAIR Score

69%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Dryad

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Paleontology

Field

Earth and Planetary Sciences

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

53%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

FOS: Biological sciencesextinctionPhanerozoicoriginationmacroevolutionary regimes

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00