Lopez-Martinez, N., 2008. The lagomorph fossil record and the origin of the European rabbit. Lagomorph Biology: 27-46.
Abstract: Lagomorphs are very prolific mammals with a rich fossil record, which particularly increased over the last years by washing and screening techniques for microfossil recovery. Fossil remains of lagomorphs have been extensively documented in the Old World and North America from Early Paleogene onwards (around 45 Ma). Lagomorph diversity is much larger in the fossil record than in the biosphere. Only 12 genera and about 75 lagomorph species are still living in recent times, most of them almost devoid of paleontological record. In contrast, around 75 genera and more than 230 species, most of them already extinct, are represented in the fossil record of Lagomorpha. The local faunas today rarely contain more than three sympatric lagomorphs, frequently just one or two taxa. Instead, up to eight lagomorph species coexisted in local paleofaunas. This pattern constitutes a rare case in the recorded history of organisms, since the fossil record even in well-represented groups contains a lower number of species than the biosphere. Only declining groups, such as brachiopods or perissodactyl mammals, show higher diversity in the past than in the present, which denotes that lagomorph lineages are also declining in recent times.
I thought this would be a fun article to discuss since it deals with a clade that someone in the group works on, and also because it brings up some more generalized evo-palaeo topics like trying to make conclusions connecting the fossil record to extant diversity/distributions. I don't think there is a free .PDF of this, but you can access it through the Carleton Library site. Since it is more of a review chapter than an experimental report, it shouldn't take too long to read/skim the interesting parts (the density of text on each page is also lower than in a typical Science or Nature report as well).
Two of us work on lagomorphs (although I only do so tangentially).
ReplyDeleteThe paper is interesting. I wasn't very familiar with the evolutionary history of lagomorphs beyond the North American Oligocene.
Another paper that came out recently which is somewhat related to my work (although much more technical) and is relevent to the evolution of lagomorphs is the following;
Koenigswald, W. V., U. Anders, S. Engels, J. A. Schultz, and I. Ruf. 2010. Tooth Morphology in Fossil and Extant Lagomorpha (Mammalia) Reflects Different Mastication Patterns. Journal of Mammalian Evolution 17:275-299.