Published August 20, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Perfect storms shape biodiversity in time and space

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. National Museum of Natural History

Description

Many of the most dramatic patterns in biological diversity are created by "Perfect Storms" —rare combinations of mutually reinforcing factors that push origination, extinction, or diversity accommodation to extremes. These patterns include the strongest diversification events (e.g. the Cambrian Explosion of animal body plans), the proliferation of hyperdiverse clades (e.g. insects, angiosperms), the richest biodiversity hotspots (e.g. the New World Tropical Montane regions and the ocean's greatest diversity pump, the tropical West Pacific), and the most severe extinction events (e.g. the Big Five mass extinctions of the Phanerozoic). Human impacts on the modern biota are also a Perfect Storm, and both mitigation and restoration strategies should be framed accordingly, drawing on biodiversity's responses to multi-driver processes in the geologic past. This approach necessarily weighs contributing factors, identifying their often non-linear and time-dependent interactions, instead of searching for unitary causes.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1093/evolinnean/kzad003
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:14478

Funding

National Science Foundation
EAR-1633535
National Science Foundation
DEB 2049627
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
EXOB08-0089
John Simon Guggenheim Foundation
Smithsonian Institution

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Evolutionary Biology, Geophysical Sciences