4.7 Article

Appearance and disappearance rates of Phanerozoic marine animal paleocommunities

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GEOLOGY
卷 50, 期 3, 页码 341-345

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GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G49371.1

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  1. W.M. Keck Foundation (Los Angeles)
  2. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (New York)
  3. Carnegie Institution for Science (Washington, D.C.)
  4. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR-1660005, OAC-1835717]
  5. Deep Carbon Observatory

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Research demonstrates that communities of organisms reoccur in space and time, with communities largely disappearing and appearing during extinction events and radiations. Analysis of fossil data shows that rates of paleo-community disappearance and appearance are highest during mass extinctions and recovery intervals, respectively, three times greater than background levels. Although taxonomic change is generally a fair predictor of ecological reorganization, there have been times in the past when ecological and taxonomic changes were decoupled.
Ecological observations and paleontological data show that communities of organisms recur in space and time. Various observations suggest that communities largely disappear in extinction events and appear during radiations. This hypothesis, however, has not been tested on a large scale due to a lack of methods for analyzing fossil data, identifying communities, and quantifying their turnover. We demonstrate an approach for quantifying turnover of communities over the Phanerozoic Eon. Using network analysis of fossil occurrence data, we provide the first estimates of appearance and disappearance rates for marine animal paleocommunities in the 100 stages of the Phanerozoic record. Our analysis of 124,605 fossil collections (representing 25,749 living and extinct marine animal genera) shows that paleo-community disappearance and appearance rates are generally highest in mass extinctions and recovery intervals, respectively, with rates three times greater than background levels. Although taxonomic change is, in general, a fair predictor of ecologic reorganization, the variance is high, and ecologic and taxonomic changes were episodically decoupled at times in the past. Extinction rate, therefore, is an imperfect proxy for ecologic change. The paleo-community turnover rates suggest that efforts to assess the ecological consequences of the present-day biodiversity crisis should focus on the selectivity of extinctions and changes in the prevalence of biological interactions.

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