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    Attenuated evolution of mammals through the Cenozoic

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    Authors
    Goswami, Anjali cc
    Noirault, Eve
    Coombs, Ellen J cc
    Clavel, Julien
    Fabre, Anne-Claire
    Halliday, Thomas JD
    Churchill, Morgan
    Curtis, Abigail
    Watanabe, Akinobu
    Simmons, Nancy B
    Beatty, Brian L
    Geisler, Jonathan H
    Fox, David L
    Felice, Ryan N
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    Issue date
    2022-10-28
    
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    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.
    Citation
    Goswami, Anjali, Eve Noirault, Ellen J Coombs, Julien Clavel, Anne-Claire Fabre, Thomas J.D Halliday, Morgan Churchill, et al. “Attenuated Evolution of Mammals through the Cenozoic.” Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 378, no. 6618 (2022): 377–383.
    Publisher
    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    Journal
    Science
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10141/623041
    DOI
    10.1126/science.abm7525
    Type
    Journal Article
    Item Description
    Copyright © 2022, The Authors. This document is the author’s final accepted version of the journal article. You are advised to consult the published version if you wish to cite from it.
    ISSN
    0036-8075
    EISSN
    1095-9203
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1126/science.abm7525
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Life sciences

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