The Clade Replacement Theory: a framework to study age-dependent extinction

Author:

Calderón del Cid Carlos123ORCID,Villalobos Fabricio4ORCID,Dobrovolski Ricardo5ORCID,Carrillo Juan D23ORCID,Silvestro Daniele236ORCID,Vilela Bruno1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratório de Ecologia Espacial, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal da Bahia , Salvador, Bahia , Brazil

2. Department of Biology, University of Fribourg , Fribourg , Switzerland

3. Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics , Fribourg , Switzerland

4. Red de Biología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología A. C. , Xalapa , México

5. Laboratório de Ecologia e Conservação, Insituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal da Bahia , Salvador, Bahia , Brazil

6. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences and Gothenburg Global Biodiversity Centre, University of Gothenburg , Gothenburg , Sweden

Abstract

Abstract There is no scientific consensus about whether and how species’ evolutionary age, or the elapsed time since their origination, might affect their probability of going extinct. Different age-dependent extinction (ADE) patterns have been proposed in theoretical and empirical studies, while the existence of a consistent and universal pattern across the tree of life remains debated. If evolutionary age predicts species extinction probability, then the study of ADE should comprise the elapsed time and the ecological process acting on species from their origin to their extinction or to the present for extant species. Additionally, given that closely related species share traits associated with fitness, evolutionary proximity could generate similar ADE patterns. Considering the historical context and extinction selectivity based on evolutionary relatedness, we build on previous theoretical work to formalize the Clade Replacement Theory (CRT) as a framework that considers the ecological and evolutionary aspects of species age and extinction probability to produce testable predictions on ADE patterns. CRT’s domain is the diversification dynamics of two or more clades competing for environmental space throughout time, and its propositions or derived hypotheses are as follows: (i) incumbency effects by an early arriving clade that limit the colonization and the diversification of a younger clade leading to a negative ADE scenario (younger species more prone to extinction than older ones) and (ii) an ecological shift triggered by an environmental change that imposes a new selective regime over the environmental space and leads to a positive ADE scenario (extinction probability increasing with age). From these propositions, we developed the prediction that the ADE scenario would be defined by whether an ecological shift happens or not. We discuss how the CRT could be tested with empirical data and provide examples where it could be applied. We hope this article will provide a common ground to unify results from different fields and foster new empirical tests of the mechanisms derived here while providing insights into CRT theoretical structuration.

Funder

CAPES

CNPq

Swiss National Science Foundation

Swedish Research Council

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference147 articles.

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