Dean Christopher D, Mannion Philip D, Butler Richard J
Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom;
School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, United Kingdom;
Palaeontology. 2016 Jan 14;59(2):225-247. doi: 10.1111/pala.12225.
Pterosaurs, a Mesozoic group of flying archosaurs, have become a focal point for debates pertaining to the impact of sampling biases on our reading of the fossil record, as well as the utility of sampling proxies in palaeodiversity reconstructions. The completeness of the pterosaur fossil specimens themselves potentially provides additional information that is not captured in existing sampling proxies, and might shed new light on the group's evolutionary history. Here we assess the quality of the pterosaur fossil record via a character completeness metric based on the number of phylogenetic characters that can be scored for all known skeletons of 172 valid species, with averaged completeness values calculated for each geological stage. The fossil record of pterosaurs is observed to be strongly influenced by the occurrence and distribution of Lagerstätten. Peaks in completeness correlate with Lagerstätten deposits, and a recovered correlation between completeness and observed diversity is rendered non-significant when Lagerstätten species are excluded. Intervals previously regarded as potential extinction events are shown to lack Lagerstätten and exhibit low completeness values: as such, the apparent low diversity in these intervals might be at least partly the result of poor fossil record quality. A positive correlation between temporal patterns in completeness of Cretaceous pterosaurs and birds further demonstrates the prominent role that Lagerstätten deposits have on the preservation of smaller bodied organisms, contrasting with a lack of correlation with the completeness of large-bodied sauropodomorphs. However, we unexpectedly find a strong correlation between sauropodomorph and pterosaur completeness within the Triassic-Jurassic, but not the Cretaceous, potentially relating to a shared shift in environmental preference and thus preservation style through time. This study highlights the importance of understanding the relationship between various taphonomic controls when correcting for sampling bias, and provides additional evidence for the prominent role of sampling on observed patterns in pterosaur macroevolution.
翼龙是中生代的一类会飞的主龙类,它们已成为有关采样偏差对我们解读化石记录的影响以及采样代理在古生物多样性重建中的效用等辩论的焦点。翼龙化石标本本身的完整性可能提供现有采样代理未捕捉到的额外信息,并可能为该类群的进化历史带来新的启示。在这里,我们通过一种基于系统发育特征数量的特征完整性度量方法来评估翼龙化石记录的质量,该方法针对172个有效物种的所有已知骨骼进行评分,并计算每个地质阶段的平均完整性值。我们观察到翼龙的化石记录受到特异埋藏化石库的出现和分布的强烈影响。完整性的峰值与特异埋藏化石库的沉积相关,当排除特异埋藏化石库中的物种时,完整性与观察到的多样性之间的恢复相关性变得不显著。先前被视为潜在灭绝事件的时期显示缺乏特异埋藏化石库且完整性值较低:因此,这些时期明显的低多样性可能至少部分是化石记录质量差的结果。白垩纪翼龙和鸟类完整性的时间模式之间的正相关进一步证明了特异埋藏化石库沉积对较小体型生物保存的突出作用,这与与大体型蜥脚形亚目恐龙的完整性缺乏相关性形成对比。然而,我们意外地发现三叠纪 - 侏罗纪时期蜥脚形亚目恐龙和翼龙的完整性之间存在很强的相关性,但白垩纪时期不存在,这可能与环境偏好的共同转变以及因此随时间的保存方式有关。这项研究强调了在纠正采样偏差时理解各种埋藏学控制之间关系的重要性,并为采样在翼龙宏观进化的观察模式中的突出作用提供了额外证据。