Dinosaurs and the Cretaceous Terrestrial Revolution
Top Cited Papers
- 22 July 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 275 (1650) , 2483-2490
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2008.0715
Abstract
The observed diversity of dinosaurs reached its highest peak during the mid- and Late Cretaceous, the 50 Myr that preceded their extinction, and yet this explosion of dinosaur diversity may be explained largely by sampling bias. It has long been debated whether dinosaurs were part of the Cretaceous Terrestrial Revolution (KTR), from 125–80 Myr ago, when flowering plants, herbivorous and social insects, squamates, birds and mammals all underwent a rapid expansion. Although an apparent explosion of dinosaur diversity occurred in the mid-Cretaceous, coinciding with the emergence of new groups (e.g. neoceratopsians, ankylosaurid ankylosaurs, hadrosaurids and pachycephalosaurs), results from the first quantitative study of diversification applied to a new supertree of dinosaurs show that this apparent burst in dinosaurian diversity in the last 18 Myr of the Cretaceous is a sampling artefact. Indeed, major diversification shifts occurred largely in the first one-third of the group's history. Despite the appearance of new clades of medium to large herbivores and carnivores later in dinosaur history, these new originations do not correspond to significant diversification shifts. Instead, the overall geometry of the Cretaceous part of the dinosaur tree does not depart from the null hypothesis of an equal rates model of lineage branching. Furthermore, we conclude that dinosaurs did not experience a progressive decline at the end of the Cretaceous, nor was their evolution driven directly by the KTR.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- A supertree of Temnospondyli: cladogenetic patterns in the most species-rich group of early tetrapodsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2007
- Supertrees Disentangle the Chimerical Origin of Eukaryotic GenomesMolecular Biology and Evolution, 2007
- The delayed rise of present-day mammalsNature, 2007
- Estimating the diversity of dinosaursProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Clann: investigating phylogenetic information through supertree analysesBioinformatics, 2004
- Quantifying biodiversity: procedures and pitfalls in the measurement and comparison of species richnessEcology Letters, 2001
- Large–scale heterogeneity of the fossil record: implications for Phanerozoic biodiversity studiesPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2001
- The Co-Radiations of Pollinating Insects and Angiosperms in the CretaceousAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1999
- Inferring Evolutionary Process from Phylogenetic Tree ShapeThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1997
- The Fossil Record and Evolution: Comparing Cladistic and Paleontologic Evidence for Vertebrate HistoryScience, 1992