Rapid action in the Palaeogene, the relationship between phenotypic and taxonomic diversification in Coenozoic mammals

Author:

Raia P.1,Carotenuto F.1,Passaro F.1,Piras P.2,Fulgione D.3,Werdelin L.4,Saarinen J.5,Fortelius M.5

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi Federico II, Largo San Marcellino 10, 80138 Napoli, Italy

2. Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche, Università Roma Tre, Largo San Leonardo Murialdo 1, 00146 Rome, Italy

3. Dipartimento di Biologia Strutturale e Funzionale, Università degli Studi Federico II, Via Cintia-Complesso Monte Sant'Angelo Naples, Italy

4. Department of Palaeozoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History, PO Box 50007, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden

5. Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki, PO Box 64, 00014 Helsinki, Finland

Abstract

A classic question in evolutionary biology concerns the tempo and mode of lineage evolution. Considered variously in relation to resource utilization, intrinsic constraints or hierarchic level, the question of how evolutionary change occurs in general has continued to draw the attention of the field for over a century and a half. Here we use the largest species-level phylogeny of Coenozoic fossil mammals (1031 species) ever assembled and their body size estimates, to show that body size and taxonomic diversification rates declined from the origin of placentals towards the present, and very probably correlate to each other. These findings suggest that morphological and taxic diversifications of mammals occurred hierarchically, with major shifts in body size coinciding with the birth of large clades, followed by taxonomic diversification within these newly formed clades. As the clades expanded, rates of taxonomic diversification proceeded independently of phenotypic evolution. Such a dynamic is consistent with the idea, central to the Modern Synthesis, that mammals radiated adaptively, with the filling of adaptive zones following the radiation.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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