Freshwater fish and the Cretaceous/Palaeogene boundary: a critical assessment of survivorship patterns

Author:

Wilson Jacob D.1ORCID,Huang E. J.1ORCID,Lyson Tyler R.2ORCID,Bever Gabriel S.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1830 Monument Street , Baltimore, MD 21205, USA

2. Department of Earth Sciences, Denver Museum of Nature & Science, 2001 Colorado Boulevard , Denver, CO 80205, USA

3. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles Street , Baltimore, MD 21218, USA

Abstract

Mass extinctions are major influences on both the phylogenetic structure of the modern biota and our ability to reconstruct broad-based patterns of evolutionary history. The most recent mass extinction is also the most famous—that which implicates a bolide impact in defining the Cretaceous/Palaeogene boundary (K/Pg). Although the biotic effects of this event receive intensive scrutiny, certain ecologically important and diverse groups remain woefully understudied. One such group is the freshwater ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii). These fish represent 25% of modern vertebrate diversity, yet the isolated and fragmentary nature of their K/Pg fossil record limits our understanding of their diversity dynamics across this event. Here, we address this problem using diversification analysis of molecular-based phylogenies alongside a morphotype analysis of fossils recovered from a unique site in the Denver Basin of western North America that provides unprecedented K/Pg resolution. Our results reveal previously unrecognized signals of post-K/Pg diversification in freshwater clades and suggest that the change was driven by localized and sporadic patterns of extinction. Supported inferences regarding the effects of the K/Pg event on freshwater fish also inform our expectations of how freshwater faunas might recover from the current biodiversity crisis.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Explorers Club

Paleontological Society

Publisher

The Royal Society

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