2020
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2005571117
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The rise of angiosperms pushed conifers to decline during global cooling

Abstract: Competition among species and entire clades can impact species diversification and extinction, which can shape macroevolutionary patterns. The fossil record shows successive biotic turnovers such that a dominant group is replaced by another. One striking example involves the decline of gymnosperms and the rapid diversification and ecological dominance of angiosperms in the Cretaceous. It is generally believed that angiosperms outcompeted gymnosperms, but the macroevolutionary processes and alternative drivers … Show more

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Cited by 110 publications
(111 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(225 reference statements)
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“…Future biogeographic analyses integrating fossil evidence might shed light on the geographic context of these coordinated climatic-diversification shifts. In general, our results challenge suggestions that recent climatic cooling precipitated macroevolutionary declines in conifers 54 (Supplementary Information). The Northern and Southern Hemispheres, however, clearly do show distinct patterns with respect to the extinction and turnover of conifer diversity during the Cenozoic 21 , and numerous extant gymnosperm species (especially cycads) are at risk of extinction due to pressures including habitat destruction 55,56,57 .…”
Section: Main Textsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…Future biogeographic analyses integrating fossil evidence might shed light on the geographic context of these coordinated climatic-diversification shifts. In general, our results challenge suggestions that recent climatic cooling precipitated macroevolutionary declines in conifers 54 (Supplementary Information). The Northern and Southern Hemispheres, however, clearly do show distinct patterns with respect to the extinction and turnover of conifer diversity during the Cenozoic 21 , and numerous extant gymnosperm species (especially cycads) are at risk of extinction due to pressures including habitat destruction 55,56,57 .…”
Section: Main Textsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…A major challenge in all evolutionary biology is to understand what factors regulate the long-term origination and extinction of taxa and thus the rise and fall of entire clades. This challenge is increased further by accumulating evidence that each clade may follow different diversity trajectories through time (3). These different trajectories may result from the fact that contrasting causes of speciation and extinction may lead to some clades rising, declining, or replacing each other (3).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a botany student in the mid-1960s, I was taught this not as a hypothesis but as an "established fact." In PNAS, Condamine et al (3) use all of the available fossil and molecular data for conifers to test the competing hypotheses that competition from angiosperms, climate change, or time alone led to the decline of conifers to the benefit of angiosperms. Results from detailed numerical analyses suggest that the increased extinction rates of conifers in the Mid-and Late Cretaceous are most parsimoniously interpreted as a response to the rise of angiosperms, and the alternative hypotheses of climate change or time alone as drivers of the conifer demise are falsified (3).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although in phylogenetic studies, diversity dependence is typically tested within a single clade (Etienne et al 2012), our phylogeny-based diversification model can be extended to allow for competition among species that are not closely related, but share similar ecological niches (Condamine et al 2020).…”
Section: Limitations Of Current Modelling Approaches and Future Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%