T HE EvoluTion of BiologiCAl DivERsiTy 497
What might account for these declines? Our first thought might be that species
become better adapted by natural selection over time, and so should become less
vulnerable to changing environments. But natural selection, having no foresight,
cannot prepare species for novel changes in the environment. If the environmen-
tal changes that threaten extinction are numerous in kind, we should not expect
much carryover of “extinction resistance” from one change to the next. So extinc-
tion rates should vary randomly over time if changes in the environment occur at
random.
Two other hypotheses have been suggested for the decline in extinction rates.
The average number of species per genus and per family seems to be greater in
the Cenozoic than in earlier eras. This would lower the probability of extinction
of higher taxa because a genus or family does not become extinct until all its con-
stituent species are extinct [1, 19]. Another explanation is that some clades are more
volatile than others: they have a higher turnover rate, evolving new families and los-
ing others before the entire clade becomes extinct. The extinction of such taxa leaves
the less volatile taxa, those that have longer life spans and lower extinction rates.
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_19.06.ai Date 12-09-2016
Q: I left in balloon text as this seemed helpful. OK?
Pelagic
Semi-
infaunal
Deep
infaunal
Shallow
infaunal
Cambrian
Tiering
Feeding
Erect
Surcial
Suspension
Surface deposit
Mining
Predatory
Grazing
Absorptive
Other
Suspension
Surface deposit
Mining
Predatory
Grazing
Absorptive
Other
Holocene
Feeding Motility
Nonmotile, unattachedNonmotile, attached
Facultative, unattachedFacultative, attached
Fully motile, slow
Fully motile, fast
Each “bin” in the ecospace
represents a way of life.
Many more bins are occupied
now than in the Cambrian.
FIGURE 19.6 The use of “ecospace” by marine animals in the Cambrian compared
with the present. Each layer represents the vertical space used by animals, from open
ocean (pelagic) to deep in the sediment (deep infaunal). In each layer, the “bins” from
left to right represent different modes of feeding, and those from front to rear rep-
resent different habits of movement (motility). Far more bins, or ways of life, are filled
(indicated by green) by animals now than in the Cambrian. (After [9].)
19_EVOL4E_CH19.indd 497 3/22/17 1:42 PM