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      EXTINCTION VULNERABILITY AND SELECTIVITY:Combining Ecological and Paleontological Views

      Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
      Annual Reviews

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          Abstract

          Extinction is rarely random across ecological and geological time scales. Traits that make some species more extinction-prone include individual traits, such as body size, and abundance. Substantial consistency appears across ecological and geological time scales in such traits. Evolutionary branching produces phylogenetic (as often measured by taxonomic) nesting of extinction-biasing traits at many scales. An example is the tendency, seen in both fossil and modern data, for higher taxa living in marine habitats to have generally lower species extinction rates. At lower taxononomic levels, recent bird and mammal extinctions are concentrated in certain genera and families. A fundamental result of such selectivity is that it can accelerate net loss of biodiversity compared to random loss of species among taxa. Replacement of vulnerable taxa by rapidly spreading taxa that thrive in human-altered environments will ultimately produce a spatially more homogenized biosphere with much lower net diversity.

          Most cited references46

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          Directions in Conservation Biology

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            An Explanation for Cope's Rule

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              Heritability at the species level: analysis of geographic ranges of cretaceous mollusks.

              Geographic range has been regarded as a property of species rather than of individuals and thus as a potential factor in macroevolutionary processes. Species durations in Late Cretaceous mollusks exhibit statistically significant positive relationships with geographic range, and the attainment of a typical frequency distribution of geographic ranges in the cohort of species that originated just before the end-Cretaceous extinction indicates that species duration is the dependent variable. The strong relation between geographic ranges in pairs of closely related species indicates that the trait is, in effect, heritable at the species level. The significant heritabilities strengthen claims for processes of evolution by species-level selection, and for differential survivorship of organismic-level traits owing to extinction and origination processes operating at higher levels.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
                Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst.
                Annual Reviews
                0066-4162
                November 1997
                November 1997
                : 28
                : 1
                : 495-516
                Article
                10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.28.1.495
                b3c4f082-9712-40d6-834e-462e399c1aab
                © 1997
                History

                Evolutionary Biology
                Evolutionary Biology

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