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Origins, bottlenecks, and present-day diversity: Patterns of morphospace occupation in marine bivalves
by
Huang, Shan
, Jablonski, David
, Roy, Kaustuv
in
Animal Shells
/ Animals
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biological taxonomies
/ Bivalvia
/ Bivalvia - classification
/ Brackish
/ Clade age
/ disparity
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary biology
/ Extinct species
/ Extinction
/ Fossils
/ Genera
/ Genetic diversity
/ Genetic Variation
/ geographic range
/ Geography
/ Marine
/ Mass extinction events
/ Mollusks
/ Morphology
/ Phylogenetics
/ Shellfish
/ Species diversity
/ Species extinction
/ Species richness
/ Taxa
/ Taxonomy
2015
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Origins, bottlenecks, and present-day diversity: Patterns of morphospace occupation in marine bivalves
by
Huang, Shan
, Jablonski, David
, Roy, Kaustuv
in
Animal Shells
/ Animals
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biological taxonomies
/ Bivalvia
/ Bivalvia - classification
/ Brackish
/ Clade age
/ disparity
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary biology
/ Extinct species
/ Extinction
/ Fossils
/ Genera
/ Genetic diversity
/ Genetic Variation
/ geographic range
/ Geography
/ Marine
/ Mass extinction events
/ Mollusks
/ Morphology
/ Phylogenetics
/ Shellfish
/ Species diversity
/ Species extinction
/ Species richness
/ Taxa
/ Taxonomy
2015
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Origins, bottlenecks, and present-day diversity: Patterns of morphospace occupation in marine bivalves
by
Huang, Shan
, Jablonski, David
, Roy, Kaustuv
in
Animal Shells
/ Animals
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biological taxonomies
/ Bivalvia
/ Bivalvia - classification
/ Brackish
/ Clade age
/ disparity
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary biology
/ Extinct species
/ Extinction
/ Fossils
/ Genera
/ Genetic diversity
/ Genetic Variation
/ geographic range
/ Geography
/ Marine
/ Mass extinction events
/ Mollusks
/ Morphology
/ Phylogenetics
/ Shellfish
/ Species diversity
/ Species extinction
/ Species richness
/ Taxa
/ Taxonomy
2015
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Origins, bottlenecks, and present-day diversity: Patterns of morphospace occupation in marine bivalves
Journal Article
Origins, bottlenecks, and present-day diversity: Patterns of morphospace occupation in marine bivalves
2015
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Overview
It has long been known that species should not be distributed randomly in morphospace (a multidimensional trait space), even under simple models of evolution. However, recent studies suggest that position in morphospace can affect aspects of evolution such as the durations of clades and the species richness of their constituent taxa. Here we investigate the dynamics of morphospace occupancy in living and fossil marine bivalves using shell size and aspect ratio, two functionally important traits. Multiple lines of evidence indicate that the center of a family's morphospace today represents a location where taxonomic diversity is maximized, apparently owing to lower extinction rates. Within individual bivalve families, species with narrow geographic ranges are distributed throughout the morphospace but widespread species, which are generally expected to be extinction resistant, tend to be concentrated near the center. The morphospace centers of most species-rich families today (defined as the median value for all species in the family) tend to be close to the positions of the family founders, further suggesting an association between position in morphospace and net diversification rates. However, trajectories of individual subclades (genera) are inconsistent with the center of morphospace being an evolutionary attractor.
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