Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers

Publication Date:
2018-03-22
Publisher:
Royal Society
Electronic ISSN:
2054-5703
Topics:
Natural Sciences in General
Keywords:
palaeontology, ecology, evolution
Published by:
_version_ 1836398857751101441
autor Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
beschreibung Lepidosauria is a speciose clade with a long evolutionary history, but there have been few attempts to explore its taxon richness through time. Here we estimate patterns of terrestrial lepidosaur genus diversity for the Triassic–Palaeogene (252–23 Ma), and compare observed and sampling-corrected richness curves generated using Shareholder Quorum Subsampling and classical rarefaction. Generalized least-squares regression (GLS) is used to investigate the relationships between richness, sampling and environmental proxies. We found low levels of richness from the Triassic until the Late Cretaceous (except in the Kimmeridgian–Tithonian of Europe). High richness is recovered for the Late Cretaceous of North America, which declined across the K–Pg boundary but remained relatively high throughout the Palaeogene. Richness decreased following the Eocene–Oligocene Grande Coupure in North America and Europe, but remained high in North America and very high in Europe compared to the Late Cretaceous; elsewhere data are lacking. GLS analyses indicate that sampling biases (particularly, the number of fossil collections per interval) are the best explanation for long-term face-value genus richness trends. The lepidosaur fossil record presents many problems when attempting to reconstruct past diversity, with geographical sampling biases being of particular concern, especially in the Southern Hemisphere.
citation_standardnr 6214345
datenlieferant ipn_articles
feed_id 220702
feed_publisher Royal Society
feed_publisher_url http://royalsocietypublishing.org/
insertion_date 2018-03-22
journaleissn 2054-5703
publikationsjahr_anzeige 2018
publikationsjahr_facette 2018
publikationsjahr_intervall 7984:2015-2019
publikationsjahr_sort 2018
publisher Royal Society
quelle Royal Society Open Science
relation http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/cgi/content/short/5/3/171830?rss=1
schlagwort palaeontology, ecology, evolution
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
shingle_author_2 Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
shingle_author_3 Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
shingle_author_4 Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
shingle_catch_all_1 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
palaeontology, ecology, evolution
Lepidosauria is a speciose clade with a long evolutionary history, but there have been few attempts to explore its taxon richness through time. Here we estimate patterns of terrestrial lepidosaur genus diversity for the Triassic–Palaeogene (252–23 Ma), and compare observed and sampling-corrected richness curves generated using Shareholder Quorum Subsampling and classical rarefaction. Generalized least-squares regression (GLS) is used to investigate the relationships between richness, sampling and environmental proxies. We found low levels of richness from the Triassic until the Late Cretaceous (except in the Kimmeridgian–Tithonian of Europe). High richness is recovered for the Late Cretaceous of North America, which declined across the K–Pg boundary but remained relatively high throughout the Palaeogene. Richness decreased following the Eocene–Oligocene Grande Coupure in North America and Europe, but remained high in North America and very high in Europe compared to the Late Cretaceous; elsewhere data are lacking. GLS analyses indicate that sampling biases (particularly, the number of fossil collections per interval) are the best explanation for long-term face-value genus richness trends. The lepidosaur fossil record presents many problems when attempting to reconstruct past diversity, with geographical sampling biases being of particular concern, especially in the Southern Hemisphere.
Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
Royal Society
2054-5703
20545703
shingle_catch_all_2 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
palaeontology, ecology, evolution
Lepidosauria is a speciose clade with a long evolutionary history, but there have been few attempts to explore its taxon richness through time. Here we estimate patterns of terrestrial lepidosaur genus diversity for the Triassic–Palaeogene (252–23 Ma), and compare observed and sampling-corrected richness curves generated using Shareholder Quorum Subsampling and classical rarefaction. Generalized least-squares regression (GLS) is used to investigate the relationships between richness, sampling and environmental proxies. We found low levels of richness from the Triassic until the Late Cretaceous (except in the Kimmeridgian–Tithonian of Europe). High richness is recovered for the Late Cretaceous of North America, which declined across the K–Pg boundary but remained relatively high throughout the Palaeogene. Richness decreased following the Eocene–Oligocene Grande Coupure in North America and Europe, but remained high in North America and very high in Europe compared to the Late Cretaceous; elsewhere data are lacking. GLS analyses indicate that sampling biases (particularly, the number of fossil collections per interval) are the best explanation for long-term face-value genus richness trends. The lepidosaur fossil record presents many problems when attempting to reconstruct past diversity, with geographical sampling biases being of particular concern, especially in the Southern Hemisphere.
Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
Royal Society
2054-5703
20545703
shingle_catch_all_3 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
palaeontology, ecology, evolution
Lepidosauria is a speciose clade with a long evolutionary history, but there have been few attempts to explore its taxon richness through time. Here we estimate patterns of terrestrial lepidosaur genus diversity for the Triassic–Palaeogene (252–23 Ma), and compare observed and sampling-corrected richness curves generated using Shareholder Quorum Subsampling and classical rarefaction. Generalized least-squares regression (GLS) is used to investigate the relationships between richness, sampling and environmental proxies. We found low levels of richness from the Triassic until the Late Cretaceous (except in the Kimmeridgian–Tithonian of Europe). High richness is recovered for the Late Cretaceous of North America, which declined across the K–Pg boundary but remained relatively high throughout the Palaeogene. Richness decreased following the Eocene–Oligocene Grande Coupure in North America and Europe, but remained high in North America and very high in Europe compared to the Late Cretaceous; elsewhere data are lacking. GLS analyses indicate that sampling biases (particularly, the number of fossil collections per interval) are the best explanation for long-term face-value genus richness trends. The lepidosaur fossil record presents many problems when attempting to reconstruct past diversity, with geographical sampling biases being of particular concern, especially in the Southern Hemisphere.
Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
Royal Society
2054-5703
20545703
shingle_catch_all_4 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
palaeontology, ecology, evolution
Lepidosauria is a speciose clade with a long evolutionary history, but there have been few attempts to explore its taxon richness through time. Here we estimate patterns of terrestrial lepidosaur genus diversity for the Triassic–Palaeogene (252–23 Ma), and compare observed and sampling-corrected richness curves generated using Shareholder Quorum Subsampling and classical rarefaction. Generalized least-squares regression (GLS) is used to investigate the relationships between richness, sampling and environmental proxies. We found low levels of richness from the Triassic until the Late Cretaceous (except in the Kimmeridgian–Tithonian of Europe). High richness is recovered for the Late Cretaceous of North America, which declined across the K–Pg boundary but remained relatively high throughout the Palaeogene. Richness decreased following the Eocene–Oligocene Grande Coupure in North America and Europe, but remained high in North America and very high in Europe compared to the Late Cretaceous; elsewhere data are lacking. GLS analyses indicate that sampling biases (particularly, the number of fossil collections per interval) are the best explanation for long-term face-value genus richness trends. The lepidosaur fossil record presents many problems when attempting to reconstruct past diversity, with geographical sampling biases being of particular concern, especially in the Southern Hemisphere.
Cleary, T. J., Benson, R. B. J., Evans, S. E., Barrett, P. M.
Royal Society
2054-5703
20545703
shingle_title_1 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
shingle_title_2 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
shingle_title_3 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
shingle_title_4 Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
timestamp 2025-06-30T23:33:44.995Z
titel Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
titel_suche Lepidosaurian diversity in the Mesozoic-Palaeogene: the potential roles of sampling biases and environmental drivers
topic TA-TD
uid ipn_articles_6214345