Data from: The impact of geographic range, sampling, ecology, and time on extinction risk in the volatile clade Graptoloida
Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative relationship with geographic range across wide temporal and taxonomic scales, the effect has been difficult to disentangle from factors such as sampling, ecological niche, or clade. In addition, studies of extinction risk have foc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Although extinction risk has been found to have a consistent negative
relationship with geographic range across wide temporal and taxonomic
scales, the effect has been difficult to disentangle from factors such as
sampling, ecological niche, or clade. In addition, studies of extinction
risk have focused on benthic invertebrates with less work on planktic
taxa. We employed a global set of 1114 planktic graptolite species from
the Ordovician to lower Devonian to analyze the predictive power of
species’ traits and abiotic factors on extinction risk, combining general
linear models (GLMs), partial least-squares regression (PLSR), and
permutation tests. Factors included measures of geographic range,
sampling, and graptolite-specific factors such as clade, biofacies
affiliation, shallow water tolerance, and age cohorts split at the base of
the Katian and Rhuddanian stages. The percent variance in durations
explained varied substantially between taxon subsets from 12% to 45%.
Overall commonness, the correlated effects of geographic range and
sampling, was the strongest, most consistent factor (12–30% variance
explained), with clade and age cohort adding up to 18% and other factors |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.5pv83 |