articleScienceMar 15, 2007Closed access

The Latitudinal Gradient in Recent Speciation and Extinction Rates of Birds and Mammals

University of British Columbia

PubMed
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Abstract

Although the tropics harbor greater numbers of species than do temperate zones, it is not known whether the rates of speciation and extinction also follow a latitudinal gradient. By sampling birds and mammals, we found that the distribution of the evolutionary ages of sister species-pairs of species in which each is the other's closest relative-adheres to a latitudinal gradient. The time to divergence for sister species is shorter at high latitudes and longer in the tropics. Birth-death models fitting these data estimate that the highest recent speciation and extinction rates occur at high latitudes and decline toward the tropics. These results conflict with the prevailing view that links high tropical…

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645
total citations
FWCI
53.95
Percentile
100%
References
24
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Extinction (optical mineralogy)
  • Genetic algorithm
  • Temperate climate
  • Tropics
  • Biology
  • Latitude
  • Ecology
  • Divergence (linguistics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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