Dissecting Global Diversity Patterns: Examples from the Ordovician Radiation
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
- Vol. 28 (1) , 85-104
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.28.1.85
Abstract
Although the history of life has been characterized by intermittent episodes of radiation that can be recognized in global compilations of biodiversity, it does not necessarily follow that these episodes are caused by processes that occurred uniformly around the world. Major diversity increases could be generated by the cumulative effects of different mechanisms operating simultaneously at several geographic or environmental scales. The purpose of this review is to describe ongoing research on the manifestations, at several scales, of the Ordovician Radiation, which was among the most extensive intervals of diversification in the history of life. Through much of the period, diversity was concentrated most heavily near regions of active mountain building and volcanism; differences in diversity patterns from continent to continent, and among regions within continents, reflect this overprint. While this suggests a linkage of the Radiation and tectonic activity, this is by no means the only mediating agent. Outcrop-based research in North America has demonstrated that tectonic activity was detrimental to some biotic elements, in contrast to its effects on other organisms. Moreover, in the Great Basin of North America where the local stratigraphic record is of particularly high quality, biotic transitions characteristic of the period occurred far more rapidly than observed in global compilations of diversity, suggesting that the global rate of transition may represent the aggregate sum of transitions that occurred abruptly, but at different times, around the world. Finally, it has been demonstrated that, in concert with an increase in average age, the environmental and geographic ranges of Ordovician genera both increased significantly through the period, indicating a role for intrinsic factors in producing Ordovician biotic patterns.Keywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tectonics of South China: Key to understanding West Pacific geologyPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Comparative diversificationdynamics among Palaeocontinents during the Ordovician RadiationGeobios, 1997
- Earth before PangeaScientific American, 1995
- Early Paleozoic orogenic belt of the Andes in southwestern South America: Result of Laurentia-Gondwana collision?Geology, 1992
- Rise of echinoderms in the Paleozoic evolutionary fauna: Significance of paleoenvironmental controlsGeology, 1992
- Revised World maps and introductionGeological Society, London, Memoirs, 1990
- Spatio‐temporal transitions in Paleozoic Bivalvia: A field comparison of upper Ordovician and upper Paleozoic bivalve‐dominated fossil assemblagesHistorical Biology, 1989
- Ordovician increase in extent and depth of bioturbation: Implications for understanding early Paleozoic ecospace utilizationGeology, 1989
- Spatio‐temporal transitions in Paleozoic Bivalvia: An analysis of North American fossil assemblagesHistorical Biology, 1988
- The Taconic OrogenyGSA Bulletin, 1971