A 450 million years long latitudinal gradient in age-dependent extinction


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Date

2020-03

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

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Data

Abstract

Leigh Van Valen famously stated that under constant conditions extinction probability is independent of species age. To test this 'law of constant extinction', we developed a new method using deep learning to infer age-dependent extinction and analysed 450 myr of marine life across 21 invertebrate clades. We show that extinction rate significantly decreases with age in > 90% of the cases, indicating that most species died out soon after their appearance while those which survived experienced ever decreasing extinction risk. This age-dependent extinction pattern is stronger towards the Equator and holds true when the potential effects of mass extinctions and taxonomic inflation are accounted for. These results suggest that the effect of biological interactions on age-dependent extinction rate is more intense towards the tropics. We propose that the latitudinal diversity gradient and selection at the species level account for this exceptional, yet little recognised, macroevolutionary and macroecological pattern.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

23 (3)

Pages / Article No.

439 - 446

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Law of constant extinction; Deep learning; Fossil occurrences; Neural networks; Mass extinction

Organisational unit

09490 - Stadler, Tanja / Stadler, Tanja

Notes

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