Placental mammal diversification and the Cretaceous–Tertiary boundary
University of California, Riverside · National Cancer Institute
Abstract
Competing hypotheses for the timing of the placental mammal radiation focus on whether extant placental orders originated and diversified before or after the Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) boundary. Molecular studies that have addressed this issue suffer from single calibration points, unwarranted assumptions about the molecular clock, andor taxon sampling that lacks representatives of all placental orders. We investigated this problem using the largest available molecular data set for placental mammals, which includes segments of 19 nuclear and three mitochondrial genes for representatives of all extant placental orders. We used the ThorneKishino method, which permits simultaneous constraints from the fossil record…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 145.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
4- MSMark S. SpringerCorresponding
University of California, Riverside, National Cancer Institute
- WJWilliam J. Murphy
University of California, Riverside, National Cancer Institute
- EEEduardo Eizirik
University of California, Riverside, National Cancer Institute
- SJStephen J. O’Brien
University of California, Riverside, National Cancer Institute
Topics & keywords
- Cretaceous
- Molecular clock
- Extant taxon
- Biology
- Phylogenetic tree
- Paleontology
- Diversification (marketing strategy)
- Evolutionary biology