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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Trends and patterns in the evolution of vascular plants: macroevolutionary implications of a multilevel taxonomic analysis
Borja Cascales-miñanaJuan SeguraJesús Muñoz-bertomeuRoc Rossubject
Extinction eventExtinctionPermianPaleozoicEcologyPaleontologysocial sciencesBiologyhumanitiesAbundance (ecology)CarboniferousSpecies richnessOriginationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsdescription
Cascales-Minana, B., Munoz-Bertomeu, J., Ros, R., Segura, J. 2010: Trends and patterns in the evolution of vascular plants: macroevolutionary implications of a multilevel taxonomic analysis. Lethaia, 10.1111/j.1502-3931.2009.00212.x Studying the macroevolutionary patterns of vascular plants from the Silurian to the present-day provides a global record of plant life history. Evolutionary rates (origination, extinction and diversification) for families, orders, classes and divisions were analysed, as was abundance and richness for 21 time intervals. An accumulative analysis, based on the total plant fossil record, the accumulated extinctions and relative diversity, was also carried out. The diversification rate shows a uniquely constant and progressive reduction from the end of the Carboniferous to the Permian when the lowest values are registered. Very small peaks seem to reflect Cretaceous extinction for families. At family level, only two time intervals present higher extinctions, than originations. Richness and accumulative analyses reveal that only 32% of the families analysed became extinct, and that approximately 90% of them disappeared at the end of the Palaeozoic. Our results indicate that plants did not undergo mass extinction events in the ‘big five’ sense, but rather, mass ecological reorganization the absence of important extinction events or evolutionary innovations producing diversification patterns without abrupt changes. □Diversification, evolutionary, extinction, fossil record, innovations, radiation, vascular plants.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-12-01 | Lethaia |