“…(a) Likely ancestor Pachyrisma, resembling many modern bivalves (from Morris & Lycett, 1853;see Schneider, 2017). Short-lived lineages, or lineages that fail to branch, are likely to generate less disparity through time, or to capitalize on an advantageous novelty, than lineages having longer durations and high rates of cladogenesis (e.g., Futuyma, 2015;Jablonski, 2017b;Rabosky et al, 2013; note that this observation is divorced from the relation between present-day species richness and disparity, which can be decoupled for many reasons). (c) Range of morphologies, from conical forms partly embedded in sediment (1-6), to coiled and flattened forms (7-9), to arcuate and stellate forms that reclined at the sediment surface (10-12); lengths range from 15 cm (1) to 2 m (11; after Ross and Skelton 1993); (b,c) by kind permission of Peter W. Skelton phenotypes it can most readily expose to selection and other forces-but on its inherent origination and extinction rates, and how those rates vary across a given phylogeny.…”