Copeâs Rule in a modular organism: directional evolution without an overarching macroevolutionary trend
收藏DataONE2019-09-17 更新2025-07-19 收录
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Copeâs Rule describes increasing body size in evolutionary lineages through geological time. This pattern has been documented in unitary organisms but does it also apply to module size in colonial organisms? We address this using 1169 cheilostome bryozoans ranging through the entire 150 million years of their evolutionary history. The temporal pattern evident in cheilostomes as a whole shows no overall change in zooid (module) size. However, individual subclades show size increases: within a genus, younger species often have larger zooids than older species. Analyses of (paleo)latitudinal shifts show that this pattern cannot be explained by latitudinal effects (Bergmannâs Rule) coupled with younger species occupying higher latitudes than older species (an âout of the tropicsâ hypothesis). While it is plausible that size increase was linked to the advantages of large zooids in feeding, competition for trophic resources and living space, other proposed mechanisms for Copeâs Rule in unitar...
创建时间:
2025-06-26



