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1.
Proc Biol Sci ; 283(1824)2016 Feb 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26842567

RESUMO

Insects are a hyper-diverse group, comprising nearly three-quarters of all named animal species on the Earth, but the environmental drivers of their richness and the roles of ecological interactions and evolutionary innovations remain unclear. Previous studies have argued that family-level insect richness increased continuously over the evolutionary history of the group, but inclusion of extant family records artificially inflated the relative richness of younger time intervals. Here we apply sampling-standardization methods to a species-level database of fossil insect occurrences, removing biases present in previous richness curves. We show that insect family-richness peaked 125 Ma and that Recent values are only 1.5-3 times as high as the Late Palaeozoic. Rarefied species-richness data also tentatively suggest little or no net increase in richness over the past 125 Myr. The Cretaceous peak in family richness was coincident with major radiations within extant groups but occurred prior to extinctions within more basal groups. Those extinctions may in part be linked to mid-Cretaceous floral turnover following the evolution of flowering plants. Negligible net richness change over the past 125 Myr implies that major radiations within extant groups were offset by reduced richness within groups that are now relict or extinct.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Evolução Biológica , Extinção Biológica , Insetos/fisiologia , Animais , Fósseis , Paleontologia
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(27): 10927-30, 2012 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22665762

RESUMO

Giant insects, with wingspans as large as 70 cm, ruled the Carboniferous and Permian skies. Gigantism has been linked to hyperoxic conditions because oxygen concentration is a key physiological control on body size, particularly in groups like flying insects that have high metabolic oxygen demands. Here we show, using a dataset of more than 10,500 fossil insect wing lengths, that size tracked atmospheric oxygen concentrations only for the first 150 Myr of insect evolution. The data are best explained by a model relating maximum size to atmospheric environmental oxygen concentration (pO(2)) until the end of the Jurassic, and then at constant sizes, independent of oxygen fluctuations, during the Cretaceous and, at a smaller size, the Cenozoic. Maximum insect size decreased even as atmospheric pO(2) rose in the Early Cretaceous following the evolution and radiation of early birds, particularly as birds acquired adaptations that allowed more agile flight. A further decrease in maximum size during the Cenozoic may relate to the evolution of bats, the Cretaceous mass extinction, or further specialization of flying birds. The decoupling of insect size and atmospheric pO(2) coincident with the radiation of birds suggests that biotic interactions, such as predation and competition, superseded oxygen as the most important constraint on maximum body size of the largest insects.


Assuntos
Atmosfera/química , Evolução Biológica , Tamanho Corporal/fisiologia , Meio Ambiente , Fósseis , Insetos/anatomia & histologia , Adaptação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Animais , Bases de Dados Factuais , Insetos/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Consumo de Oxigênio/fisiologia , Paleontologia , Temperatura , Asas de Animais/anatomia & histologia , Asas de Animais/metabolismo
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