4.6 Article

Permian trilobites and the applicability of the living fossil concept to extinct clades

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2023.1166126

Keywords

morphological stasis; rates of evolutionary change; morphometrics; arthropod; morphological diversity; Proetidae; relict taxa; diversity curve

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Some taxa are considered living fossils because they were known from the fossil record before being discovered alive today or because their modern relatives bear a strong resemblance to fossil relatives. However, the questions inspired by living fossils can be applied to any clade, including completely extinct ones. It is unnecessary to restrict research programs to clades for which an extant member meets the criteria of a living fossil.
Some taxa occupy our imaginations as living fossils because they were known from the fossil record before being discovered alive today. Other taxa are considered living fossils because modern relatives bear a strong morphological resemblance to fossil relatives, or because they occupy a contracted geographic range or have less diversity now than in the past, or because they represent phylogenetic diversity that requires conservation. A characterizing feature of living fossils-and thus an implicit assumption of all criteria-is that the living fossil of interest is extant. However, the general research questions that living fossils inspire-Why do rates of evolution vary across organisms, across traits, and across time? Why do some clades decline in diversity over extended periods?-may be applied to any clade, including completely extinct clades. We propose that there is nothing special about now when it comes to pursuing these questions and that it is unnecessarily limiting to restrict research programs to clades for which an extant member meets some conception of the living fossil moniker. To this end, we investigate the extent to which Permian trilobites might resemble living fossils, albeit from the perspective of 253 million years ago, when the last trilobites were still alive. We do so by comparing the taxonomic diversity, geographic range, and morphological disparity of trilobites living in the Permian to earlier time periods. We find that Permian trilobites meet most definitions of living fossils, although our assessment of morphological change and character retention depend on taxonomic scale.

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