Abstract
In 2003, Stanley & Powell reported depressed rates of origination and extinction in marine invertebrates during the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA). Using a database of crinoid genera, rates of origination, extinction and genus duration were calculated at the stage level from the Early Devonian to the Late Permian. This 165 m.y. time span includes non-glacial intervals before and after the LPIA, which spanned the Serpukhovian to Sakmarian, providing background rates for comparison. Data generated on crinoid evolutionary rates during the Middle to Late Palaeozoic were analysed and compared to Stanley & Powell's data to determine whether crinoid evolutionary patterns support their findings or suggest an alternative hypothesis. Rates of origination and extinction in all crinoid clades were reduced during the LPIA compared to the combined background intervals before and after the LPIA. However, crinoid diversity was higher during the LPIA than the surrounding time intervals. The difference in diversity trends between crinoids and other marine invertebrates is due to the advanced cladids clade. Unstable, fluctuating environmental conditions during the LPIA may have created habitats suitable for opportunistic crinoid genera that reduced both the probability of origination and extinction. The increased diversity of the advanced cladids is likely due to their unique adaptation of muscular arm articulations, which allowed them to thrive in marine settings with increased siliciclastic influx brought on by the Alleghenian orogeny. Despite the advanced cladids’ departure from the expected diversity count, the results of analyses performed on the updated crinoid database provide independent confirmation of Stanley & Powell's original hypothesis of depressed evolutionary rates in marine invertebrates during the LPIA.
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