Cope's rule in the evolution of marine animals

Cope's rule proposes that animal lineages evolve toward larger body size over time. To test this hypothesis across all marine animals, we compiled a data set of body sizes for 17,208 genera of marine animals spanning the past 542 million years. Mean biovolume across genera has increased by a fa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2015-02, Vol.347 (6224), p.867-870
Hauptverfasser: Heim, Noel A., Knope, Matthew L., Schaal, Ellen K., Wang, Steve C., Payne, Jonathan L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cope's rule proposes that animal lineages evolve toward larger body size over time. To test this hypothesis across all marine animals, we compiled a data set of body sizes for 17,208 genera of marine animals spanning the past 542 million years. Mean biovolume across genera has increased by a factor of 150 since the Cambrian, whereas minimum biovolume has decreased by less than a factor of 10, and maximum biovolume has increased by more than a factor of 100,000. Neutral drift from a small initial value cannot explain this pattern. Instead, most of the size increase reflects differential diversification across classes, indicating that the pattern does not reflect a simple scaling-up of widespread and persistent selection for larger size within populations.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.1260065