Authors
Blaire Van Valkenburgh
Publication date
1999/5
Source
Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Volume
27
Issue
1
Pages
463-493
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Description
Abstract
The history of carnivorous mammals is characterized by a series of rise-and-fall patterns of diversification in which declining clades are replaced by phylogenetically distinct but functionally similar clades. Seven such examples from the last 46 million years are described for North America and Eurasia. In three of the seven turnover events, competition with replacement taxa may have driven the decline of formerly dominant taxa. In the remaining four this is less likely because inferred functional similarity was minimal during the interval of temporal overlap between clades. However, competition still may have been important in producing the rise-and-fall pattern through suppression of evolution within replacement taxa; as long as the large carnivore ecospace was filled, the radiation of new taxa into that ecospace was limited, only occurring after the extinction of the incumbents. The apparently inevitable …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Van Valkenburgh - Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 1999