Abstract
Cyrtocrinids (Cyrtocrinida) are fully sessile post-Palaeozoic crinoids (Crinoidea) of unusual morphology exhibiting complex diversity dynamics and evolutionary history. To date, however, no study has ever examined the macro-evolutionary patterns of body-size trends in these crinoids. A compilation of a body-size dataset for cyrtocrinid genera revealed a trend of increasing size throughout their evolutionary history. A maximum-likelihood approach showed that the observed trend is best characterized by a general random walk. Recorded body-size pattern is thus consistent with the Cope-Depéret's rule implying the existence of active, directional selective pressures towards larger body-sizes. The case provides a rare example of directional body-size trend in the fossil record.
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