Nine exceptional radiations plus high turnover explain species diversity in jawed vertebrates
University of California, Los Angeles · Washington State University · +4 more institutions
Abstract
The uneven distribution of species richness is a fundamental and unexplained pattern of vertebrate biodiversity. Although species richness in groups like mammals, birds, or teleost fishes is often attributed to accelerated cladogenesis, we lack a quantitative conceptual framework for identifying and comparing the exceptional changes of tempo in vertebrate evolutionary history. We develop MEDUSA, a stepwise approach based upon the Akaike information criterion for detecting multiple shifts in birth and death rates on an incompletely resolved phylogeny. We apply MEDUSA incompletely to a diversity tree summarizing both evolutionary relationships and species richness of 44 major clades of jawed vertebrates. We…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 67.03
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Vertebrate
- Cladogenesis
- Biology
- Species richness
- Biodiversity
- Tetrapod (structure)
- Evolutionary biology
- Ecology
- Life below water