Title of article
Macroevolution of ecosystem engineering, niche construction and diversity
Author/Authors
Douglas H. Erwin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
7
From page
304
To page
310
Abstract
Organisms influence their environments through activities that range from bioturbation to modification of redox gradients and construction of structures. Some of these activities modify the selective regime of the builder (niche construction) and some influence the ecological success of other species (ecosystem engineering) as well as their evolutionary prospects. In this article, I argue that these processes produce effects that persist over geological time, modulating macroevolutionary patterns and diversity. Examples include greater sediment bioturbation and increased thickness and persistence of shell beds. The impact of these processes has been increasing over time, with recent communities encompassing greater ecosystem engineering than those of the early Phanaerozoic. Thus, positive feedback through environmentally mediated selection seems to have increasingly enhanced biodiversity through the Phanaerozoic.
Journal title
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Record number
772180
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