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Cambrian Explosion Evolutionary Diversification mya
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Cambrian Explosion: All major body plans first made an appearance in the fossil record during a 40 my period
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Ediacaran Fuanas entirely soft-bodied organisms from 565 mya
Brachina delicata Spriggina floundersi (sponges, jellyfish, comb jellies)
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New Fossil Finds are Pushing Back Estimates of Divergence Times
Fossil embryos suggest precambrian diversification of bilateralians (Xiao et al. 1998) Possible flatworm or arthropod zygotes and embryos
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Burgess Shale Faunas 520 mya
(trilobites, segmented worms, molluscs, chordates)
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New Fossil Finds are Pushing Back Estimates Of Animal Divergence Times
(Shu et al. 1999) 530 my Cambrian vertebrate: Haikouichthys eraicunensis
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Small subunit RNA most basal earliest fossils
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Cambrian: Diversification of Animal
Body Plans Symmetry a. Radial or asymmetrical: Diploblast (endoderm and ectoderm) b. Bilateral: Triploblast (endo, ecto, and mesoderm) Coelomate i. Protostomes ii.Deuterostomes Also: segmented body plans, shells, exoskeletons, appendages, notochords
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Was the Cambrian Explosion Explosive?
Molecular clock estimates suggest my divergence times for the major animal groups (Wray et al., 1996). i.e. Major animal lineages were established pre - Cambrian. if so There should be fossil evidence!
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What Caused the Cambrian Explosion?
Environmental change: Higher oxygen may have allowed for larger, energetically costly morphologies. Diversification of phytoplankton may have spurred the evolution of herbivores and predators. Genetic changes? Cloudina
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Stasis Is Evolution Too!
Darwin’s View Punctuated Equilibrium (Gould and Eldridge, 1972)
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Jackson and Cheetham, 1994
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Why Does Stasis Occur? not for lack of genetic variation dynamic stasis in pliocene bivalves
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Extinction Mass extinctions account for 4% of all extinctions The big 5 of the phanerozoic.
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Iridium concentration
in clay layer at KT Boundary Other evidence: Chicxulub crater Microtektites Soot deposits Evidence of tsunami
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Habitat Destruction Human Population by 2050 = 13 billion
Current extinctions are occurring at times the normal or background rate. May et al. 1995, Pimm et al., 1995 Human Population by 2050 = 13 billion
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