Publication | Open Access
Shifts in food webs and niche stability shaped survivorship and extinction at the end-Cretaceous
28
Citations
111
References
2022
Year
Biodiversity LossNiche StabilityEngineeringFood WebsMass ExtinctionFood ChainTrophic ImpactCretaceous PeriodLatent Extinction RiskConservation BiologyTrophic WebBiodiversityFood Web InteractionBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyNiche LimitsCretaceous-paleogene BoundaryPaleoecologyEcological Niche Partitioning
It has long been debated why groups such as non-avian dinosaurs became extinct whereas mammals and other lineages survived the Cretaceous/Paleogene mass extinction 66 million years ago. We used Markov networks, ecological niche partitioning, and Earth System models to reconstruct North American food webs and simulate ecospace occupancy before and after the extinction event. We find a shift in latest Cretaceous dinosaur faunas, as medium-sized species counterbalanced a loss of megaherbivores, but dinosaur niches were otherwise stable and static, potentially contributing to their demise. Smaller vertebrates, including mammals, followed a consistent trajectory of increasing trophic impact and relaxation of niche limits beginning in the latest Cretaceous and continuing after the mass extinction. Mammals did not simply proliferate after the extinction event; rather, their earlier ecological diversification might have helped them survive.
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