Publications by authors named "James Crampton"

Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on accurately identifying species and their evolutionary lineages through the analysis of genetic and morphological variations in Penion marine snails from New Zealand, comparing living populations and fossils over time.
  • Findings reveal that while genetic and shell morphology generally align in identifying current species, some taxonomic splits are incorrect due to shell size being an unreliable measure for species delimitation.
  • An unexpected result shows that by re-evaluating the classification of a fossil specimen, the researchers observed a period of morphological stasis in shell shape, suggesting that lineage identification significantly influences our understanding of evolutionary patterns.
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The fossil record provides empirical patterns of morphological change through time and is central to the study of the tempo and mode of evolution. Here we apply likelihood-based time-series analyses to the near-continuous fossil record of Neogene planktonic foraminifera and reveal a morphological shift along the Truncorotalia lineage. Based on a geometric morphometric dataset of 1,459 specimens, spanning 5.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the connection between shell shape and genetic inheritance in three marine snail genera: Penion, Antarctoneptunea, and Kelletia, to see if shell morphology represents their evolutionary relationships.
  • Researchers analyzed DNA and shell variations across sixteen species, finding that while the genera are genetically distinct (monophyletic), some species within Penion present uncertainties in their classification.
  • Results indicate that shell form effectively distinguishes the genera and aligns with major evolutionary splits, although the ability to accurately identify species and finer phylogenetic groups using morphology alone is limited.
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Periodic fluctuations in past biodiversity, speciation, and extinction have been proposed, with extremely long periods ranging from 26 to 62 million years, although forcing mechanisms remain speculative. In contrast, well-understood periodic Milankovitch climate forcing represents a viable driver for macroevolutionary fluctuations, although little evidence for such fluctuation exists except during the Late Cenozoic. The reality, magnitude, and drivers of periodic fluctuations in macroevolutionary rates are of interest given long-standing debate surrounding the relative roles of intrinsic biotic interactions vs.

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The extent to which biological diversity affects rates of diversification is central to understanding macroevolutionary dynamics, yet no consensus has emerged on the importance of diversity-dependence of evolutionary rates. Here, we analyse the species-level fossil record of early Palaeozoic graptoloids, documented with high temporal resolution, to test directly whether rates of diversification were influenced by levels of standing diversity within this major clade of marine zooplankton. To circumvent the statistical regression-to-the-mean artefact, whereby higher- and lower-than-average values of diversity tend to be followed by negative and positive diversification rates, we construct a non-parametric, empirically scaled, diversity-independent null model by randomizing the observed diversification rates with respect to time.

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It is not clear how Southern Ocean phytoplankton communities, which form the base of the marine food web and are a crucial element of the carbon cycle, respond to major environmental disturbance. Here, we use a new model ensemble reconstruction of diatom speciation and extinction rates to examine phytoplankton response to climate change in the southern high latitudes over the past 15 My. We identify five major episodes of species turnover (origination rate plus extinction rate) that were coincident with times of cooling in southern high-latitude climate, Antarctic ice sheet growth across the continental shelves, and associated seasonal sea-ice expansion across the Southern Ocean.

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Two distinct regimes of extinction dynamic are present in the major marine zooplankton group, the graptolites, during the Ordovician and Silurian periods (486-418 Ma). In conditions of "background" extinction, which dominated in the Ordovician, taxonomic evolutionary rates were relatively low and the probability of extinction was highest among newly evolved species ("background extinction mode"). A sharp change in extinction regime in the Late Ordovician marked the onset of repeated severe spikes in the extinction rate curve; evolutionary turnover increased greatly in the Silurian, and the extinction mode changed to include extinction that was independent of species age ("high-extinction mode").

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A bivalve assemblage from the Lower Cretaceous Puez Formation at the type locality, Piz de Puez (Dolomites, South Tyrol, northern Italy) is described. Given the large amount of sedimentary rock screened during the course of this study, the <50 bivalves examined here, although occurring in very low abundance, are considered to represent a reasonably comprehensive sample. The assemblage provides insight into an autochthonous, Mesozoic, deep-water bivalve community, which was dominated by glass scallops.

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Species definition and delimitation is a non-trivial problem in evolutionary biology that is particularly problematic for fossil organisms. This is especially true when considering the continuity of past and present species, because species defined in the fossil record are not necessarily equivalent to species defined in the living fauna. Correctly assigned fossil species are critical for sensitive downstream analysis (e.

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Article Synopsis
  • The occupancy of a species—how much space it occupies over time—changes due to big ecological factors and historical events.
  • A study of marine mollusks in New Zealand revealed that their occupancy tends to rise to a peak and then decline, suggesting that those species at higher risk of extinction have been in decline for a long time.
  • This pattern contrasts with what is seen in incumbency, as species do not remain stable at their peak occupancy but tend to experience extended periods of increase and decline.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Understanding biodiversity changes over geological time requires addressing biases in how fossils are sampled due to rock exposure and age variability.
  • - Data from New Zealand suggests that the area where rocks are visible (outcrop area) is a good indicator of the amount of rock available for study, especially in stable geological areas.
  • - Conversely, just counting the number of rock formations does not effectively predict how much rock is actually exposed for sampling in New Zealand.
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