4.8 Article

Morphological disparity of ammonoids and the mark of Permian mass extinctions

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 306, Issue 5694, Pages 264-266

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1102127

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The taxonomic diversity of ammonoids, in terms of the number of taxa preserved, provides an incomplete picture of the extinction pattern during the Permian because of a strongly biased fossil record. The analysis of morphological disparity (the variety of shell shapes) is a powerful complementary tool for testing hypotheses about the selectivity of extinction and permits the recognition of three distinct patterns. First, a trend of decreasing disparity, ranging for about 30 million years, led to a minimum disparity immediately before the Permian-Triassic boundary. Second, the strongly selective Capitanian crisis fits a model of background extinction driven by standard environmental changes. Third, the end-Permian mass extinction operated as a random, nonselective sorting of morphologies, which is consistent with a catastrophic cause.

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