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Community Evolution and the Origin of Mammals
Author(s) -
Olson Everett C.
Publication year - 1966
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.2307/1933776
Subject(s) - herbivore , ecology , adaptive radiation , mammal , competition (biology) , biology , food chain , terrestrial ecosystem , tetrapod (structure) , ecosystem , paleontology , phylogenetics , biochemistry , gene
The evolutionary course from primitive pelycosaurian reptiles through therapsids to mammals can be profitably studied in relationship to modifications of the structure of the communities in which these reptiles existed. For this purpose the community is defined in very board terms. Three types of communities are recognized upon the basis of the nature of the food chain. Each has an important tetrapod component. Early phases of the evolution that culminated in mammals took place in communities that were strongly tied to water by the structure of the food chain. The physiological bases of the development of mammals appear to have been related to this environmental restriction. In successive pulses, however, the pelycosaur—therapsid communities developed terrestrial reptilian herbivores and thereby broke with the water—based food chain. More strictly terrestrial communities developed concurrently, with the insects, which were a food source for the reptiles, as the principal herbivores. From this sort of community came the terrestrial lepidosaurian—archosaurian reptilian radiation. The terrestrial communities so developed came into competition. In this competition the therapsid lines were temporarily unsuccessful, leaving only small, but very mammal—like, representatives in the late Triassic. After a long period with relatively little adaptive radiation, these remnants provided the basis for the radiations of mammals that led to the great successes of the Cenozoic era.

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