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Reconstructing past species assemblages reveals the changing patterns and drivers of extinction through time
Authors:Lindell Bromham  Robert Lanfear  Phillip Cassey  Gillian Gibb  Marcel Cardillo
Affiliation:Centre for Macroevolution and Macroecology, Division of Ecology Evolution and Genetics, Research School of Biology, Australian National University, , Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 0200, Australia, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, , South Australia 5005, Australia, Ecology Group, Institute of Natural Resources, Massey University, , Palmerston North, New Zealand.
Abstract:Predicting future species extinctions from patterns of past extinctions or current threat status relies on the assumption that the taxonomic and biological selectivity of extinction is consistent through time. If the driving forces of extinction change through time, this assumption may be unrealistic. Testing the consistency of extinction patterns between the past and the present has been difficult, because the phylogenetically explicit methods used to model present-day extinction risk typically cannot be applied to the data from the fossil record. However, the detailed historical and fossil records of the New Zealand avifauna provide a unique opportunity to reconstruct a complete, large faunal assemblage for different periods in the past. Using the first complete phylogeny of all known native New Zealand bird species, both extant and extinct, we show how the taxonomic and phylogenetic selectivity of extinction, and biological correlates of extinction, change from the pre-human period through Polynesian and European occupation, to the present. These changes can be explained both by changes in primary threatening processes, and by the operation of extinction filter effects. The variable patterns of extinction through time may confound attempts to identify risk factors that apply across time periods, and to infer future species declines from past extinction patterns and current threat status.
Keywords:extinction filter   extinction risk   macroecology   comparative method   New Zealand   birds
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