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Dynamic response of Permian brachiopod communities to long-term environmental change.
Nature. 2004 Apr 15; 428(6984):738-41.Nat

Abstract

The fossil record preserves numerous natural experiments that can shed light on the response of ecological communities to environmental change. However, directly observing the community dynamics of extinct organisms is not possible. As an alternative, neutral ecological models suggest that species abundance distributions reflect dynamical processes like migration, competition, recruitment, and extinction. Live-dead comparisons suggest that such distributions can be faithfully preserved in the rock record. Here we use a maximum-likelihood approach to show that brachiopod (lamp shell) abundance distributions from four temporally distinct ecological landscapes from the Glass Mountains, Texas (of the Permian period), exhibit significant differences. Further, all four are better fitted by zero-sum multinomial distributions, characteristic of Hubbell's neutral model, than by log-normal distributions, as predicted by the traditional ecological null hypothesis. Using the neutral model as a guide, we suggest that sea level fluctuations spanning about 10 Myr altered the degrees of isolation and exchange among local communities within these ecological landscapes. Neither these long-term environmental changes nor higher-frequency sea level fluctuations resulted in wholesale extinction or major innovation within evolutionary lineages.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Geology and Geophysics, 3115 TAMU, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843, USA. tomo@geo.tamu.eduNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15085129

Citation

Olszewski, Thomas D., and Douglas H. Erwin. "Dynamic Response of Permian Brachiopod Communities to Long-term Environmental Change." Nature, vol. 428, no. 6984, 2004, pp. 738-41.
Olszewski TD, Erwin DH. Dynamic response of Permian brachiopod communities to long-term environmental change. Nature. 2004;428(6984):738-41.
Olszewski, T. D., & Erwin, D. H. (2004). Dynamic response of Permian brachiopod communities to long-term environmental change. Nature, 428(6984), 738-41.
Olszewski TD, Erwin DH. Dynamic Response of Permian Brachiopod Communities to Long-term Environmental Change. Nature. 2004 Apr 15;428(6984):738-41. PubMed PMID: 15085129.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Dynamic response of Permian brachiopod communities to long-term environmental change. AU - Olszewski,Thomas D, AU - Erwin,Douglas H, PY - 2003/12/10/received PY - 2004/03/05/accepted PY - 2004/4/16/pubmed PY - 2004/5/15/medline PY - 2004/4/16/entrez SP - 738 EP - 41 JF - Nature JO - Nature VL - 428 IS - 6984 N2 - The fossil record preserves numerous natural experiments that can shed light on the response of ecological communities to environmental change. However, directly observing the community dynamics of extinct organisms is not possible. As an alternative, neutral ecological models suggest that species abundance distributions reflect dynamical processes like migration, competition, recruitment, and extinction. Live-dead comparisons suggest that such distributions can be faithfully preserved in the rock record. Here we use a maximum-likelihood approach to show that brachiopod (lamp shell) abundance distributions from four temporally distinct ecological landscapes from the Glass Mountains, Texas (of the Permian period), exhibit significant differences. Further, all four are better fitted by zero-sum multinomial distributions, characteristic of Hubbell's neutral model, than by log-normal distributions, as predicted by the traditional ecological null hypothesis. Using the neutral model as a guide, we suggest that sea level fluctuations spanning about 10 Myr altered the degrees of isolation and exchange among local communities within these ecological landscapes. Neither these long-term environmental changes nor higher-frequency sea level fluctuations resulted in wholesale extinction or major innovation within evolutionary lineages. SN - 1476-4687 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15085129/Dynamic_response_of_Permian_brachiopod_communities_to_long_term_environmental_change_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -