Silurian trilobite alpha diversity and the end-Ordovician mass extinction

  • Adrain J
  • Westrop S
  • Chatterton B
  • et al.
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Abstract

Following the end-Ordovician extinction, global clade diversity of Silurian trilobites dropped to about half of Ordovician levels. Although clade diversity failed to recover, this extinction had surprisingly little long-term impact on the number of trilobite species that occupied local habitats (alpha diversity). A new compilation of data from Laurentia and other continents indicates that Silurian trilobite alpha diversities in all major environments were comparable to those of the Late Cambrian and Ordovician; shallow subtidal diversity reached an all-time high during the Late Ordovician. The profound differences in patterns at local and global levels demonstrate the necessity for a hierarchical approach to analyses of diversity. Factors governing global clade diversity are lodged at hierarchical levels beyond those controlling local species richness and must be sought in studies of between-habitat (beta) or geographic (gamma) diversity.

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Adrain, J. M., Westrop, S. R., Chatterton, B. D. E., & Ramsköld, L. (2000). Silurian trilobite alpha diversity and the end-Ordovician mass extinction. Paleobiology, 26(4), 625–646. https://doi.org/10.1666/0094-8373(2000)026<0625:stadat>2.0.co;2

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