نتایج جستجو برای: mass extinction

تعداد نتایج: 500636  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2010
Michael R Rampino

E xtinctions have played an important role in the history of life by clearing out niches and fostering adaptive radiations. Major mass extinctions involving 70% to more than 90% of extant species occurred at least five times during the last 540 million years. The discovery by Alvarez et al. (1) that the end-Cretaceous (65 Mya) mass extinction coincided with evidence for the impact of an asteroi...

Journal: :Current Biology 2015
Pincelli Hull

The vast majority of species that have ever lived went extinct sometime other than during one of the great mass extinction events. In spite of this, mass extinctions are thought to have outsized effects on the evolutionary history of life. While part of this effect is certainly due to the extinction itself, I here consider how the aftermaths of mass extinctions might contribute to the evolution...

2013
Marcello Ruta Kenneth D. Angielczyk Jörg Fröbisch Michael J. Benton

Adaptive radiations are central to macroevolutionary theory. Whether triggered by acquisition of new traits or ecological opportunities arising from mass extinctions, it is debated whether adaptive radiations are marked by initial expansion of taxic diversity or of morphological disparity (the range of anatomical form). If a group rediversifies following a mass extinction, it is said to have pa...

2013
Daril A. Vilhena Elisha B. Harris Carl T. Bergstrom Max E. Maliska Peter D. Ward Christian A. Sidor Caroline A. E. Strömberg Gregory P. Wilson

Biogeographic patterns of survival help constrain the causal factors responsible for mass extinction. To test whether biogeography influenced end-Cretaceous (K-Pg) extinction patterns, we used a network approach to delimit biogeographic units (BUs) above the species level in a globalMaastrichtian database of 329 bivalve genera. Geographic range is thought to buffer taxa from extinction, but the...

Journal: :Trends in ecology & evolution 2007
Jennifer C McElwain Surangi W Punyasena

Five mass extinction events have punctuated the geological record of marine invertebrate life. They are characterized by faunal extinction rates and magnitudes that far exceed those observed elsewhere in the geological record. Despite compelling evidence that these extinction events were probably driven by dramatic global environmental change, they were originally thought to have little macroec...

Journal: :Biology letters 2014
Serban Procheş Gianluca Polgar David J Marshall

We use dated phylogenetic trees for tetrapod vertebrates to identify lineages that shifted between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in terms of feeding or development, and to assess the timing of such events. Both stem and crown lineage ages indicate a peak in transition events in correspondence with the K-Pg mass extinction. This meets the prediction that changes in competitive pressure and ...

2008
Steve C. Wang Andrew M. Bush

—Studies of extinction in the fossil record commonly involve comparisons of taxonomic extinction rates, often expressed as the percentage of taxa (e.g., families or genera) going extinct in a time interval. Such extinction rates may be influenced by factors that do not reflect the intrinsic severity of an extinction trigger. Two identical triggering events (e.g., bolide impacts, sea level chang...

Journal: :Science 2010
Peter Schulte Laia Alegret Ignacio Arenillas José A Arz Penny J Barton Paul R Bown Timothy J Bralower Gail L Christeson Philippe Claeys Charles S Cockell Gareth S Collins Alexander Deutsch Tamara J Goldin Kazuhisa Goto José M Grajales-Nishimura Richard A F Grieve Sean P S Gulick Kirk R Johnson Wolfgang Kiessling Christian Koeberl David A Kring Kenneth G MacLeod Takafumi Matsui Jay Melosh Alessandro Montanari Joanna V Morgan Clive R Neal Douglas J Nichols Richard D Norris Elisabetta Pierazzo Greg Ravizza Mario Rebolledo-Vieyra Wolf Uwe Reimold Eric Robin Tobias Salge Robert P Speijer Arthur R Sweet Jaime Urrutia-Fucugauchi Vivi Vajda Michael T Whalen Pi S Willumsen

The Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary approximately 65.5 million years ago marks one of the three largest mass extinctions in the past 500 million years. The extinction event coincided with a large asteroid impact at Chicxulub, Mexico, and occurred within the time of Deccan flood basalt volcanism in India. Here, we synthesize records of the global stratigraphy across this boundary to assess the pro...

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