Repeatability of taxon longevity in successive foraminifera radiations and a theory of random appearance and extinction

  • Levinton J
  • Ginzburg L
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Abstract

An analysis of taxonomic longevity for species of the two Cenozoic radiations of Caribbean planktonic foraminifera shows strong similarity in longevity for extinct taxa, though extant species of the latter radiation are biased towards longer-lived forms. In this case, the present is not the key to the past. A simple one-parametric stochastic model predicts generally the shape of the distributions, though there is an excess of species with model longevity and a deficiency of longer-lived forms, relative to the prediction of the model. Although the one parameter may relate to the biology of the group under consideration, the distribution about the mode may reflect random appearance-extinction processes.

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Levinton, J. S., & Ginzburg, L. (1984). Repeatability of taxon longevity in successive foraminifera radiations and a theory of random appearance and extinction. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 81(17), 5478–5481. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.81.17.5478

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