4.4 Article

Clade age and not diversification rate explains species richness among animal taxa

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 169, Issue 4, Pages E97-E106

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/512135

Keywords

biodiversity patterns; clade age; diversification rate; metazoa; species richness

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Animal taxa show remarkable variability in species richness across phylogenetic groups. Most explanations for this disparity postulate that taxa with more species have phenotypes or ecologies that cause higher diversification rates (i.e., higher speciation rates or lower extinction rates). Here we show that clade longevity, and not diversification rate, has primarily shaped patterns of species richness across major animal clades: more diverse taxa are older and thus have had more time to accumulate species. Diversification rates calculated from 163 species-level molecular phylogenies were highly consistent within and among three major animal phyla ( Arthropoda, Chordata, Mollusca) and did not correlate with species richness. Clades with higher estimated diversification rates were younger, but species numbers increased with increasing clade age. A fossil-based data set also revealed a strong, positive relationship between total extant species richness and crown group age across the orders of insects and vertebrates. These findings do not negate the importance of ecology or phenotype in influencing diversification rates, but they do show that clade longevity is the dominant signal in major animal biodiversity-patterns. Thus, some key innovations may have acted through fostering clade longevity and not by heightening diversification rate.

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