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Journal ArticleDOI

Extinctions in the fossil record

David Jablonski
- 29 Apr 1994 - 
- Vol. 344, Iss: 1307, pp 11-17
TLDR
Approaches to extinction analysis and prediction based on morphological variety or biodisparity should be explored as an adjunct or alternative to taxon inventories or phylogenetic metrics.
Abstract
Direct comparison of ancient extinctions to the present-day situation is difficult, because quantitative palaeontological data come primarily from marine invertebrates, fossilized species are usually drawn from the more abundant and widespread taxa, and time resolution is rarely better than 10 $^{3}$ -10 $^{4}$ years. A growing array of techniques permits quantitative error estimates on some of these potential biases, and allows calculation of species extinction intensities from genus-level data, which are more robust. Extensive as today's species losses probably are, they have yet to equal any of the Big Five mass extinctions. Background extinction patterns are potential sources of insight regarding present-day biotic losses; over 90% of past species extinction has occurred at times other than the Big Five mass extinctions. Mean durations of fossil species vary by more than an order of magnitude even within clades, rendering uninformative any global average for background extinction. Taxon-specific variation is evidently related to intrinsic biotic factors such as geographic range and population size. Approaches to extinction analysis and prediction based on morphological variety or biodisparity should be explored as an adjunct or alternative to taxon inventories or phylogenetic metrics. Rebounds from mass extinctions are geologically rapid but ecologically slow; biodiversity recovery and the re-establishment of some communities typically requires 5-10 million years.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Has the Earth’s sixth mass extinction already arrived?

TL;DR: Differences between fossil and modern data and the addition of recently available palaeontological information influence understanding of the current extinction crisis, and results confirm that current extinction rates are higher than would be expected from the fossil record.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extinction rates of North American freshwater fauna

TL;DR: Using an exponential decay model, this article derived recent and future extinction rates for North American freshwater fauna that are five times higher than those for terrestrial fauna, assuming that imperiled freshwater species will not survive throughout the next century, their model projects a future extinction rate of 4% per decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extinction Vulnerability and Selectivity: Combining Ecological and Paleontological Views

TL;DR: This work has shown that replacement of vulnerable taxa by rapidly spreading taxa that thrive in human-altered environments will ultimately produce a spatially more homogenized biosphere with much lower net diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

A unified theory of biogeography and relative species abundance and its application to tropical rain forests and coral reefs

TL;DR: In this paper, a unified theory of island biogeography and relative species abundance was proposed, which predicts the existence of a fundamental biodiversity number h that controls not only species rich- ness, but also relative species abundances in the source area metacommunity at equilibrium between speciation and extinction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Density-dependent cladogenesis in birds.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of the distribution of speciation events through time for 45 clades of birds shows a model of density-dependent speciation in birds, whereby speciation slows as ecological opportunities and geographical space place limits on clade growth.
References
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Book

A Geologic time scale

W. B. Harland
Book

A Geologic time scale 1989

W. B. Harland
TL;DR: The magnetostratigraphic time scale as mentioned in this paper has been used for the calibration of stage boundaries in the last few decades and has been shown to be useful in the measurement of geologic events.
Book

Extinction: Bad Genes or Bad Luck?

TL;DR: If extinction is selective, the time homogeneous model suggests that trilobites had species durations 14 to 28 percent shorter than normal for Paleozoic manne invertebrates, which may be because extinction is, in fact, selective.
Book ChapterDOI

Studies of Mascarene Island birds: The fossil record

G. S. Cowles
TL;DR: The visitors who added notably to early ornithological history were Leguat (1708), on Rodrigues in 1691, Dubois (1674), on Reunion 1671-2, and Van Neck, on Mauritius 1598 or 1599 (see Strickland 1848).
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