Abstract

Phanerozoic evolution of brachiopods produced many linear (established by a comparison of successive geologic time units) and non-linear (established by a comparison of non-successive geologic time units) effects, which can be examined quantitatively by using the similarity coefficients (Czekanowski's Quantified Coefficient and Gower Index) and correlation tools. The high-rank suprageneric diversity structure accounts for a number of superfamilies in each of 26 orders for every epoch of geological time. The intensity of turnovers in this structure was generally low during the entire Phanerozoic. It was slightly stronger during the Early Paleozoic, but close to zero during the Cenozoic, when the high-rank suprageneric diversity structure of brachiopods stabilized finally. Significant turnovers took place at the Middle Cambrian–Early Ordovician, the Late Ordovician–Early Silurian, the Late Silurian–Early Devonian, the Middle Devonian–Mississippian, and the Permian–Triassic transitions. Influences of mass extinctions, both major like those End Ordovician or Permian/Triassic and minor like Early Jurassic or Jurassic/Cretaceous, on the high-rank suprageneric diversity structure of brachiopods is registered. The strongest was the consequences of the Permian/Triassic catastrophe, which perhaps even reset the brachiopod evolution. No evident direct relationships are established between intensity of turnovers and eustatic fluctuations. However, the changes in the diversity structure recorded with the Gower Index provide evidence that eustatic lowstands were more favorable for intensification in these changes.

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