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Attenuated evolution of mammals through the Cenozoic

Authors :
Anjali Goswami
Eve Noirault
Ellen J. Coombs
Julien Clavel
Anne-Claire Fabre
Thomas J. D. Halliday
Morgan Churchill
Abigail Curtis
Akinobu Watanabe
Nancy B. Simmons
Brian L. Beatty
Jonathan H. Geisler
David L. Fox
Ryan N. Felice
Source :
Science
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The Cenozoic diversification of placental mammals is the archetypal adaptive radiation. Yet, discrepancies between molecular divergence estimates and the fossil record fuel ongoing debate around the timing, tempo, and drivers of this radiation. Analysis of a three-dimensional skull dataset for living and extinct placental mammals demonstrates that evolutionary rates peak early and attenuate quickly. This long-term decline in tempo is punctuated by bursts of innovation that decreased in amplitude over the past 66 million years. Social, precocial, aquatic, and herbivorous species evolve fastest, especially whales, elephants, sirenians, and extinct ungulates. Slow rates in rodents and bats indicate dissociation of taxonomic and morphological diversification. Frustratingly, highly similar ancestral shape estimates for placental mammal superorders suggest that their earliest representatives may continue to elude unequivocal identification.

Details

ISSN :
00368075
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e1e167987372027bbc3d078f2b6e0eb6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abm7525