Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
510 CHAPTER 19

declined [40]. By these criteria, the rodents seem to have displaced the multituber-
culates (see Figure 19.19B). Vascular plants, which certainly compete for space and
light, showed this pattern during the Cretaceous, when flowering plants increased in
diversity and abundance at the expense of nonflowering plants.
Incumbent replacement has probably been more common than competitive dis-
placement [7, 8, 33]. The best evidence of incumbency and release is supplied by
repeated replacements. For instance, amphichelydians, the “stem group” of turtles,
could not retract their head and neck into their shell (FIGURE 19.22). Two groups of
modern turtles, which protect themselves by bending the neck within the shell or
under its edge, replaced the amphichelydians in different parts of the world four or
five times, especially after the K/Pg extinction event. The modern groups evidently
could not radiate until the amphichelydians had become extinct. That this replace-
ment occurred in parallel in different places and times makes it a likely example of
release from competition [62].
What can we conclude? Is diversity of species constrained by ecological limits?
Probably both sides in the debate are partly right. Most clades, viewed individually,
seem to have approached a diversity limit. But new clades, with new ways of living,
have arisen throughout life’s history, seeming to push the diversity ceiling higher and
higher—which, to advocates of boundless diversity, looks like no ceiling at all [29].

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
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(B)

(C)

(A)

FIGURE 19.22 Pleurodiran and cryptodiran turtles replaced
incumbent amphichelydian turtles, which became extinct.
(A) Amphichelydians, represented here by the reconstructed
skeleton of an early turtle (Proganochelys quenstedti, Trias-
sic), could not retract their head for protection. (B) Snakeneck
turtles such as Chelodina longicollis are pleurodiran turtles,
which flex the neck sideways beneath the edge of the cara-
pace. (C) Cryptodiran turtles, represented here by an eastern
box turtle (Terrapene carolina), fully retract the head into the
shell by flexing the neck vertically. (A courtesy of E. Gaffney,
American Museum of Natural History.)

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