J. Alroy, CONSTANT EXTINCTION, CONSTRAINED DIVERSIFICATION, AND UNCOORDINATED STASIS IN NORTH-AMERICAN MAMMALS, Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 127(1-4), 1996, pp. 285-311
The coordinated stasis model has far-reaching implications. Among them
are three important predictions concerning diversity dynamics that I
test here against the Cenozoic fossil record of terrestrial North Amer
ican mammals. First, origination and extinction rates should be correl
ated; second, turnover should be a composite function of very low back
ground rates and occasional, dramatic turnover pulses; and finally, st
asis should result from ecological (niche) incumbency, with the domain
s of incumbent species being defined by ecological similarity, which i
n the case of mammals corresponds closely with taxonomic affinity. The
data used to test these hypotheses are standing diversity levels and
counts of originations and extinctions for 1193 genera and 3161 specie
s. Instead of relying on a traditional time scale comprised of ''ages'
' having uneven and unpredictable durations, the diversity curve is co
mputed directly from a multivariate ordination of 3870 faunal lists, a
nd then sectioned into 1.0 m.y. intervals. The lists span the late Cre
taceous through late Pleistocene interval, exclusive of the Wisconsina
n, and are taxonomically standardized to remove junior synonyms, out-d
ated combinations, and nomina dubia. Because Cretaceous and Paleocene
diversity dynamics are idiosyncratic, only the last 55 intervals (Eoce
ne-Pleistocene: 55-0.01 Ma) are analyzed. The test of origination and
extinction rates shows that an apparent correlation between them is a
statistical artifact related to the necessary coincidence of first and
last appearances for taxa known from just one interval. The test of v
ariation in turnover shows that most of the observed extinction rates
could be generated by a single, invariant underlying rate, whereas ori
gination rates show many well-defined pulses. Furthermore, origination
pulses within particular orders are not fully coincident. The very la
rgest pulses of origination therefore seem to be mediated by key adapt
ations within particular groups, not by the general opportunity to hh
niches opened up by extinction. Both of these tests argue against the
idea of sweeping ''reorganization'' intervals bounding placid ''stasis
'' intervals, and against Vrba's turnover pulse hypothesis. Finally, t
ests for niche incumbency, based on plots of per-taxon turnover rates
against standing diversity, show that incumbency is widespread and med
iated by the suppression of origination at high diversity levels in al
l groups. Extinction is a far less important controlling factor. Becau
se orders are ecologically distinct, but random subsamples of the enti
re data set actually show stronger controls than groupings based on or
dinal affinity, it appears that niche space has little or no important
ecological substructuring. Therefore, mammalian diversity seems to be
integrated at the highest possible taxonomic level, in opposition to
the coordinated stasis concept of static guilds. On balance, the resul
ts indicate that although the data are robust and provide strong suppo
rt for the niche incumbency model and the idea of diversity equilibriu
m, they generally disconfirm the unique predictions of coordinated sta
sis.