Evolutionary speed limits inferred from the fossil record
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 415 (6867) , 65-68
- https://doi.org/10.1038/415065a
Abstract
The dynamics of extinction and diversification determine the long-term effects of extinction episodes1. If rapid bursts of extinction are offset by equally rapid bursts of diversification, their biodiversity consequences will be transient. But if diversification rates cannot accelerate rapidly enough, pulses of extinction will lead to long-lasting depletion of biodiversity2,3. Here I use spectral analysis of the fossil record to test whether diversification rates can accelerate as much as extinction rates, over both short and long spans of geological time. I show that although the long-wavelength variability of diversification rates equals or exceeds that of extinctions, diversification rates are markedly less variable than extinction rates at wavelengths shorter than roughly 25 million years. This implies that there are intrinsic speed limits that constrain how rapidly diversification rates can accelerate in response to pulses of extinction.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Large–scale heterogeneity of the fossil record: implications for Phanerozoic biodiversity studiesPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2001
- Origination and extinction components of taxonomic diversity: general problemsPaleobiology, 2000
- Delayed biological recovery from extinctions throughout the fossil recordNature, 2000
- Spectrum: spectral analysis of unevenly spaced paleoclimatic time seriesComputers & Geosciences, 1997
- Time Series Analysis by Projection. I. Statistical Properties of Fourier AnalysisThe Astronomical Journal, 1996
- Patterns of Phanerozoic Extinction: a Perspective from Global Data BasesPublished by Springer Nature ,1996
- The Future of BiodiversityScience, 1995
- Biodiversity Studies: Science and PolicyScience, 1991
- Studies in astronomical time series analysis. II - Statistical aspects of spectral analysis of unevenly spaced dataThe Astrophysical Journal, 1982
- Revolutions in the History of LifePublished by Geological Society of America ,1967