Abundance distributions imply elevated complexity of post-Paleozoic marine ecosystems
- PMID: 17124319
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1133795
Abundance distributions imply elevated complexity of post-Paleozoic marine ecosystems
Abstract
Likelihood analyses of 1176 fossil assemblages of marine organisms from Phanerozoic (i.e., Cambrian to Recent) assemblages indicate a shift in typical relative-abundance distributions after the Paleozoic. Ecological theory associated with these abundance distributions implies that complex ecosystems are far more common among Meso-Cenozoic assemblages than among the Paleozoic assemblages that preceded them. This transition coincides not with any major change in the way fossils are preserved or collected but with a shift from communities dominated by sessile epifaunal suspension feeders to communities with elevated diversities of mobile and infaunal taxa. This suggests that the end-Permian extinction permanently altered prevailing marine ecosystem structure and precipitated high levels of ecological complexity and alpha diversity in the Meso-Cenozoic.
Comment in
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Paleoecology. Life's complexity cast in stone.Science. 2006 Nov 24;314(5803):1254-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1135738. Science. 2006. PMID: 17124314 No abstract available.
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