AI Article Synopsis

  • Insects make up about three-quarters of all named animal species, but the reasons for their diversity and the impact of ecological and evolutionary factors are still not fully understood.
  • Previous research suggested that insect family richness increased over time, but this was misleading due to biases in data from more recent families.
  • Our study shows that insect family-richness peaked around 125 million years ago, with little to no significant increase in species richness over the past 125 million years, indicating a balance between the emergence of new groups and the extinction of older ones.

Article Abstract

Insects are a hyper-diverse group, comprising nearly three-quarters of all named animal species on the Earth, but the environmental drivers of their richness and the roles of ecological interactions and evolutionary innovations remain unclear. Previous studies have argued that family-level insect richness increased continuously over the evolutionary history of the group, but inclusion of extant family records artificially inflated the relative richness of younger time intervals. Here we apply sampling-standardization methods to a species-level database of fossil insect occurrences, removing biases present in previous richness curves. We show that insect family-richness peaked 125 Ma and that Recent values are only 1.5-3 times as high as the Late Palaeozoic. Rarefied species-richness data also tentatively suggest little or no net increase in richness over the past 125 Myr. The Cretaceous peak in family richness was coincident with major radiations within extant groups but occurred prior to extinctions within more basal groups. Those extinctions may in part be linked to mid-Cretaceous floral turnover following the evolution of flowering plants. Negligible net richness change over the past 125 Myr implies that major radiations within extant groups were offset by reduced richness within groups that are now relict or extinct.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4760164PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.2476DOI Listing

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