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Alternating regimes of shallow and deep-sea diversification explain a species-richness paradox in marine fishes
by
Wainwright, Peter C.
, Friedman, Sarah T.
, Martinez, Christopher M.
, Tornabene, Luke
, Miller, Elizabeth Christina
, Price, Samantha A.
in
Animals
/ Biological Sciences
/ Carbon
/ Colonization
/ Deep sea
/ Deep sea environments
/ Ecosystem
/ Euphotic zone
/ Evolution
/ Fish
/ Fishes
/ Hypotheses
/ Marine fish
/ Paradoxes
/ Phylogeny
/ Sea level
/ Shallow water
/ Speciation
/ Species richness
/ Water
2022
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Alternating regimes of shallow and deep-sea diversification explain a species-richness paradox in marine fishes
by
Wainwright, Peter C.
, Friedman, Sarah T.
, Martinez, Christopher M.
, Tornabene, Luke
, Miller, Elizabeth Christina
, Price, Samantha A.
in
Animals
/ Biological Sciences
/ Carbon
/ Colonization
/ Deep sea
/ Deep sea environments
/ Ecosystem
/ Euphotic zone
/ Evolution
/ Fish
/ Fishes
/ Hypotheses
/ Marine fish
/ Paradoxes
/ Phylogeny
/ Sea level
/ Shallow water
/ Speciation
/ Species richness
/ Water
2022
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Alternating regimes of shallow and deep-sea diversification explain a species-richness paradox in marine fishes
by
Wainwright, Peter C.
, Friedman, Sarah T.
, Martinez, Christopher M.
, Tornabene, Luke
, Miller, Elizabeth Christina
, Price, Samantha A.
in
Animals
/ Biological Sciences
/ Carbon
/ Colonization
/ Deep sea
/ Deep sea environments
/ Ecosystem
/ Euphotic zone
/ Evolution
/ Fish
/ Fishes
/ Hypotheses
/ Marine fish
/ Paradoxes
/ Phylogeny
/ Sea level
/ Shallow water
/ Speciation
/ Species richness
/ Water
2022
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Alternating regimes of shallow and deep-sea diversification explain a species-richness paradox in marine fishes
Journal Article
Alternating regimes of shallow and deep-sea diversification explain a species-richness paradox in marine fishes
2022
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Overview
The deep sea contains a surprising diversity of life, including iconic fish groups such as anglerfishes and lanternfishes. Still, >65% of marine teleost fish species are restricted to the photic zone <200 m, which comprises less than 10% of the ocean’s total volume. From a macroevolutionary perspective, this paradox may be explained by three hypotheses: 1) shallow water lineages have had more time to diversify than deep-sea lineages, 2) shallow water lineages have faster rates of speciation than deep-sea lineages, or 3) shallow-to-deep sea transition rates limit deep-sea richness. Here we use phylogenetic comparative methods to test among these three non-mutually exclusive hypotheses. While we found support for all hypotheses, the disparity in species richness is better described as the uneven outcome of alternating phases that favored shallow or deep diversification over the past 200 million y. Shallow marine teleosts became incredibly diverse 100 million y ago during a period of warm temperatures and high sea level, suggesting the importance of reefs and epicontinental settings. Conversely, deep-sea colonization and speciation was favored during brief episodes when cooling temperatures increased the efficiency of the ocean’s carbon pump. Finally, time-variable ecological filters limited shallow-to-deep colonization for much of teleost history, which helped maintain higher shallow richness. A pelagic lifestyle and large jaws were associated with early deep-sea colonists, while a demersal lifestyle and a tapered body plan were typical of later colonists. Therefore, we also suggest that some hallmark characteristics of deepsea fishes evolved prior to colonizing the deep sea.
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