Michelle Casey | Towson University (original) (raw)

Papers by Michelle Casey

Research paper thumbnail of Integrating geographic ranges across temporal scales

Trends in Ecology and Evolution, Oct 1, 2022

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Research paper thumbnail of Impact of Geographic Range Size on Extinction Selectivity in Late Paleozoic Brachiopods of the North American Midcontinent

GSA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - 2018, 2018

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Research paper thumbnail of The effects of geographic range size and abundance on extinction during a time of “sluggish”’ evolution

Paleobiology, Dec 17, 2020

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Research paper thumbnail of Morphometric Analysis Of astarte (Bivalvia: Astartidae) from the Atlantic Coastal Plain

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Research paper thumbnail of The preservation potential of terrestrial biogeographic patterns

Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

Extinction events in the geological past are similar to the present-day biodiversity crisis in th... more Extinction events in the geological past are similar to the present-day biodiversity crisis in that they have a pronounced biogeography, producing dramatic changes in the spatial distributions of species. Reconstructing palaeobiogeographic patterns from fossils therefore allows us to examine the long-term processes governing the formation of regional biotas, and potentially helps build spatially explicit models for future biodiversity loss. However, the extent to which biogeographic patterns can be preserved in the fossil record is not well understood. Here, we perform a suite of simulations based on the present-day distribution of North American mammals, aimed at quantifying the preservation potential of beta diversity and spatial richness patterns over extinction events of varying intensities, and after applying a stepped series of taphonomic filters. We show that taphonomic biases related to body size are the biggest barrier to reconstructing biogeographic patterns over extinctio...

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Research paper thumbnail of Ecophenotypic shape variability within Astarte (Class: Bivalvia) from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, U.S.A.: A study using geometric morphometrics

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology

Abstract The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for t... more Abstract The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for testing hypotheses surrounding the environmental and ecological effects on marine fauna. To conduct these studies in a rigorous manner, a reliable taxonomy must be established for the organisms within this physiographic province. In this study, we focus on the bivalve genus Astarte, which is commonly found in this region, and has many formally recognized species. We test between two competing hypotheses for the unusually high species richness of this genus: 1) taxonomy – the presence of discrete morphotypes represent valid species within this genus; and, 2) ecology – the many recognized ‘species’ in this genus in fact represent ecophenotypic variants of a smaller number of species, and thus richness is inflated. We test between these two hypotheses using a geometric morphometric analysis of landmarks placed on 646 shells, representing six different taxa from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain. We performed Procrustes transformation and Principle Components Analysis (PCA) on landmark data, allometric residuals, and outline harmonics to fully understand the variability of morphologies present. All PCA results show large amounts of overlap between all species. It is likely some of these species are valid taxonomic groups within the genus but should be classified as sub-species instead of separate species. These results provide strong support for our ‘ecology’ hypothesis, and suggests the genus Astarte needs revision. Future studies incorporating detailed sedimentological characteristics or ecological information (e.g., drilling frequency) will further elucidate palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental drivers of ecophenotypic variation present in this genus. Further, the accurate identification of fossil species has important implications for our ability to reconstruct biodiversity trends in relation to the emergence of the Central American Isthmus and subsequent changes in ocean circulation.

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Research paper thumbnail of You Are What You Eat: Stable Isotopic Evidence Indicates That the Naticid Gastropod Neverita duplicata Is an Omnivore

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2016

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Research paper thumbnail of Mixed assemblages of drilling predators and the problem of identity in the fossil record: A case study using the muricid gastropod Ecphora

Paleobiology, 2015

Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecologi... more Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecological studies because they provide direct, preservable evidence of predation. The muricidEcphorais common in many Neogene Atlantic Coastal Plain assemblages in the United States, but is frequently ignored in studies of naticid predation. We used a combination of Pliocene fossil, modern beach, and experimentally derived samples to evaluate the hypothesis thatEcphorawas an important source of drillholes in infaunal bivalve prey shared with naticids. We focused on the large, thick-shelled venerid,Mercenaria,which is commonly drilled by naticids today. Laboratory experiments, modern beach samples, and the published literature confirm that naticids preferentially drill near the umbo (significant clumping of holes), show a significant correlation between prey size and predator size (estimated by outer borehole diameter), and preferMercenaria<50 mm antero-posterior width when other prey are pr...

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Research paper thumbnail of Access To Obstetric Services In Rural Counties Still Declining, With 9 Percent Losing Services, 2004–14

Health Affairs

Recent closures of rural obstetric units and entire hospitals have exacerbated concerns about acc... more Recent closures of rural obstetric units and entire hospitals have exacerbated concerns about access to care for more than twenty-eight million women of reproductive age living in rural America. Yet the extent of recent obstetric unit closures has not yet been measured. Using national data, we found that 9 percent of rural counties experienced the loss of all hospital obstetric services in the period 2004-14. In addition, another 45 percent of rural US counties had no hospital obstetric services at all during the study period. That left more than half of all rural US counties without hospital obstetric services. Counties with fewer obstetricians and family physicians per women of reproductive age and per capita, respectively; a higher percentage of non-Hispanic black women of reproductive age; and lower median household incomes and those in states with more restrictive Medicaid income eligibility thresholds for pregnant women had higher odds of lacking hospital obstetric services. The same types of counties were also more likely to experience the loss of obstetric services, which highlights the challenge of providing adequate geographic access to obstetric care in vulnerable and underserved rural communities.

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Research paper thumbnail of The effects of geographic range size and abundance on extinction during a time of “sluggish”' evolution

Paleobiology, 2021

Abstract. Geographic range size and abundance are important determinants of extinction risk in fo... more Abstract. Geographic range size and abundance are important determinants of extinction risk in fossil and extant taxa. However, the relationship between these variables and extinction risk has not been tested extensively during evolutionarily “quiescent” times of low extinction and speciation in the fossil record. Here we examine the influence of geographic range size and abundance on extinction risk during the late Paleozoic (Mississippian–Permian), a time of “sluggish” evolution when global rates of origination and extinction were roughly half those of other Paleozoic intervals. Analyses used spatiotemporal occurrences for 164 brachiopod species from the North American midcontinent. We found abundance to be a better predictor of extinction risk than measures of geographic range size. Moreover, species exhibited reductions in abundance before their extinction but did not display contractions in geographic range size. The weak relationship between geographic range size and extinctio...

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Research paper thumbnail of Using Bivalve Death Assemblages as an Indicator for Stressed River Ecosystems

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Research paper thumbnail of Introduction to the Trilobites Laboratory

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Research paper thumbnail of Introduction to the Trilobites Key

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Research paper thumbnail of Beyond memorization: an intermediate-level paleontology activity that integrates anatomy, ecology, and macroevolutionary theory using trilobites

Evolution: Education and Outreach, 2014

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Research paper thumbnail of You Are What You Eat: Stable Isotopic Evidence Indicates That the Naticid Gastropod Neverita duplicata Is an Omnivore

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2016

Species belonging to the family Naticidae (commonly called moon snails) are important infaunal ga... more Species belonging to the family Naticidae (commonly called moon snails) are important infaunal gastropod predators found in soft-bottom marine communities worldwide that traditionally have been thought to prey on other mollusks, giving them the expected trophic position of a predator (trophic position = 3). Realized trophic position estimates of the naticid Neverita duplicata from Long Island Sound, however, range between 2.3 and 2.5, indicating omnivory or an anomalously low nitrogen (N) fractionation factor. To evaluate the likelihood of omnivory, this study presents whole body stable isotopic analysis of nitrogen and carbon from the soft tissues of laboratory-reared and field-collected N. duplicata. Experimental organisms were maintained on a diet of the bivalve prey Mercenaria mercenaria for 1 year. The median N fractionation factor derived from the experimental moon snails was 3.58‰ thus precluding the presence of an atypical fractionation factor (substantially lower than 3.4‰). Numerous molluscan taxa were collected from Long Island Sound in order to evaluate the trophic ecology of N. duplicata in the context of a natural food web. Evidence from the carbon (C) signatures of field-collected N. duplicata indicate a reliance on littoral food sources that is inconsistent with a diet of filter-feeding M. mercenaria, even when calculated using the species-specific C fractionation factor derived from the laboratory experiment. Field-collected N. duplicata also show considerable isotopic overlap (N and C) with grazing Littorina littorea. For these reasons, we hypothesize that N. duplicata feeds on some combination of benthic primary producers (most likely macroalgae and/or epiphytic diatoms), carrion, and bivalve/gastropod tissue and discuss the possible identity of plants consumed.

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Research paper thumbnail of Ecophenotypic shape variability within Astarte (Class: Bivalvia) from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, U.S.A.: A study using geometric morphometrics

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2019

The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for testing hy... more The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for testing hypotheses surrounding the environmental and ecological effects on marine fauna. To conduct these studies in a rigorous manner, a reliable taxonomy must be established for the organisms within this physiographic province. In this study, we focus on the bivalve genus Astarte, which is commonly found in this region, and has many formally recognized species. We test between two competing hypotheses for the unusually high species richness of this genus: 1) taxonomy-the presence of discrete morphotypes represent valid species within this genus; and, 2) ecology-the many recognized 'species' in this genus in fact represent ecophenotypic variants of a smaller number of species, and thus richness is inflated. We test between these two hypotheses using a geometric morphometric analysis of landmarks placed on 646 shells, representing six different taxa from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain. We performed Procrustes transformation and Principle Components Analysis (PCA) on landmark data, allometric residuals, and outline harmonics to fully understand the variability of morphologies present. All PCA results show large amounts of overlap between all species. It is likely some of these species are valid taxonomic groups within the genus but should be classified as sub-species instead of separate species. These results provide strong support for our 'ecology' hypothesis, and suggests the genus Astarte needs revision. Future studies incorporating detailed sedimentological characteristics or ecological information (e.g., drilling frequency) will further elucidate palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental drivers of ecophenotypic variation present in this genus. Further, the accurate identification of fossil species has important implications for our ability to reconstruct biodiversity trends in relation to the emergence of the Central American Isthmus and subsequent changes in ocean circulation.

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Research paper thumbnail of Conservation Paleobiology of Long Island Sound Mollusks

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Research paper thumbnail of Clumping behavior as a strategy against drilling predation: Implications for the fossil record

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, Dec 1, 2008

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Research paper thumbnail of Beyond memorization: an intermediate-level paleontology activity that integrates anatomy, ecology, and macroevolutionary theory using trilobites

Evolution: Education and Outreach, 2014

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Research paper thumbnail of Introduction to the Trilobites Laboratory

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Research paper thumbnail of Integrating geographic ranges across temporal scales

Trends in Ecology and Evolution, Oct 1, 2022

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Research paper thumbnail of Impact of Geographic Range Size on Extinction Selectivity in Late Paleozoic Brachiopods of the North American Midcontinent

GSA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - 2018, 2018

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The effects of geographic range size and abundance on extinction during a time of “sluggish”’ evolution

Paleobiology, Dec 17, 2020

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Morphometric Analysis Of astarte (Bivalvia: Astartidae) from the Atlantic Coastal Plain

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The preservation potential of terrestrial biogeographic patterns

Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

Extinction events in the geological past are similar to the present-day biodiversity crisis in th... more Extinction events in the geological past are similar to the present-day biodiversity crisis in that they have a pronounced biogeography, producing dramatic changes in the spatial distributions of species. Reconstructing palaeobiogeographic patterns from fossils therefore allows us to examine the long-term processes governing the formation of regional biotas, and potentially helps build spatially explicit models for future biodiversity loss. However, the extent to which biogeographic patterns can be preserved in the fossil record is not well understood. Here, we perform a suite of simulations based on the present-day distribution of North American mammals, aimed at quantifying the preservation potential of beta diversity and spatial richness patterns over extinction events of varying intensities, and after applying a stepped series of taphonomic filters. We show that taphonomic biases related to body size are the biggest barrier to reconstructing biogeographic patterns over extinctio...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Ecophenotypic shape variability within Astarte (Class: Bivalvia) from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, U.S.A.: A study using geometric morphometrics

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology

Abstract The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for t... more Abstract The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for testing hypotheses surrounding the environmental and ecological effects on marine fauna. To conduct these studies in a rigorous manner, a reliable taxonomy must be established for the organisms within this physiographic province. In this study, we focus on the bivalve genus Astarte, which is commonly found in this region, and has many formally recognized species. We test between two competing hypotheses for the unusually high species richness of this genus: 1) taxonomy – the presence of discrete morphotypes represent valid species within this genus; and, 2) ecology – the many recognized ‘species’ in this genus in fact represent ecophenotypic variants of a smaller number of species, and thus richness is inflated. We test between these two hypotheses using a geometric morphometric analysis of landmarks placed on 646 shells, representing six different taxa from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain. We performed Procrustes transformation and Principle Components Analysis (PCA) on landmark data, allometric residuals, and outline harmonics to fully understand the variability of morphologies present. All PCA results show large amounts of overlap between all species. It is likely some of these species are valid taxonomic groups within the genus but should be classified as sub-species instead of separate species. These results provide strong support for our ‘ecology’ hypothesis, and suggests the genus Astarte needs revision. Future studies incorporating detailed sedimentological characteristics or ecological information (e.g., drilling frequency) will further elucidate palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental drivers of ecophenotypic variation present in this genus. Further, the accurate identification of fossil species has important implications for our ability to reconstruct biodiversity trends in relation to the emergence of the Central American Isthmus and subsequent changes in ocean circulation.

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Research paper thumbnail of You Are What You Eat: Stable Isotopic Evidence Indicates That the Naticid Gastropod Neverita duplicata Is an Omnivore

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2016

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Research paper thumbnail of Mixed assemblages of drilling predators and the problem of identity in the fossil record: A case study using the muricid gastropod Ecphora

Paleobiology, 2015

Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecologi... more Drillholes made by naticid and muricid gastropods are frequently used in evolutionary and ecological studies because they provide direct, preservable evidence of predation. The muricidEcphorais common in many Neogene Atlantic Coastal Plain assemblages in the United States, but is frequently ignored in studies of naticid predation. We used a combination of Pliocene fossil, modern beach, and experimentally derived samples to evaluate the hypothesis thatEcphorawas an important source of drillholes in infaunal bivalve prey shared with naticids. We focused on the large, thick-shelled venerid,Mercenaria,which is commonly drilled by naticids today. Laboratory experiments, modern beach samples, and the published literature confirm that naticids preferentially drill near the umbo (significant clumping of holes), show a significant correlation between prey size and predator size (estimated by outer borehole diameter), and preferMercenaria<50 mm antero-posterior width when other prey are pr...

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Research paper thumbnail of Access To Obstetric Services In Rural Counties Still Declining, With 9 Percent Losing Services, 2004–14

Health Affairs

Recent closures of rural obstetric units and entire hospitals have exacerbated concerns about acc... more Recent closures of rural obstetric units and entire hospitals have exacerbated concerns about access to care for more than twenty-eight million women of reproductive age living in rural America. Yet the extent of recent obstetric unit closures has not yet been measured. Using national data, we found that 9 percent of rural counties experienced the loss of all hospital obstetric services in the period 2004-14. In addition, another 45 percent of rural US counties had no hospital obstetric services at all during the study period. That left more than half of all rural US counties without hospital obstetric services. Counties with fewer obstetricians and family physicians per women of reproductive age and per capita, respectively; a higher percentage of non-Hispanic black women of reproductive age; and lower median household incomes and those in states with more restrictive Medicaid income eligibility thresholds for pregnant women had higher odds of lacking hospital obstetric services. The same types of counties were also more likely to experience the loss of obstetric services, which highlights the challenge of providing adequate geographic access to obstetric care in vulnerable and underserved rural communities.

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Research paper thumbnail of The effects of geographic range size and abundance on extinction during a time of “sluggish”' evolution

Paleobiology, 2021

Abstract. Geographic range size and abundance are important determinants of extinction risk in fo... more Abstract. Geographic range size and abundance are important determinants of extinction risk in fossil and extant taxa. However, the relationship between these variables and extinction risk has not been tested extensively during evolutionarily “quiescent” times of low extinction and speciation in the fossil record. Here we examine the influence of geographic range size and abundance on extinction risk during the late Paleozoic (Mississippian–Permian), a time of “sluggish” evolution when global rates of origination and extinction were roughly half those of other Paleozoic intervals. Analyses used spatiotemporal occurrences for 164 brachiopod species from the North American midcontinent. We found abundance to be a better predictor of extinction risk than measures of geographic range size. Moreover, species exhibited reductions in abundance before their extinction but did not display contractions in geographic range size. The weak relationship between geographic range size and extinctio...

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Research paper thumbnail of Using Bivalve Death Assemblages as an Indicator for Stressed River Ecosystems

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Introduction to the Trilobites Laboratory

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Research paper thumbnail of Introduction to the Trilobites Key

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Beyond memorization: an intermediate-level paleontology activity that integrates anatomy, ecology, and macroevolutionary theory using trilobites

Evolution: Education and Outreach, 2014

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of You Are What You Eat: Stable Isotopic Evidence Indicates That the Naticid Gastropod Neverita duplicata Is an Omnivore

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2016

Species belonging to the family Naticidae (commonly called moon snails) are important infaunal ga... more Species belonging to the family Naticidae (commonly called moon snails) are important infaunal gastropod predators found in soft-bottom marine communities worldwide that traditionally have been thought to prey on other mollusks, giving them the expected trophic position of a predator (trophic position = 3). Realized trophic position estimates of the naticid Neverita duplicata from Long Island Sound, however, range between 2.3 and 2.5, indicating omnivory or an anomalously low nitrogen (N) fractionation factor. To evaluate the likelihood of omnivory, this study presents whole body stable isotopic analysis of nitrogen and carbon from the soft tissues of laboratory-reared and field-collected N. duplicata. Experimental organisms were maintained on a diet of the bivalve prey Mercenaria mercenaria for 1 year. The median N fractionation factor derived from the experimental moon snails was 3.58‰ thus precluding the presence of an atypical fractionation factor (substantially lower than 3.4‰). Numerous molluscan taxa were collected from Long Island Sound in order to evaluate the trophic ecology of N. duplicata in the context of a natural food web. Evidence from the carbon (C) signatures of field-collected N. duplicata indicate a reliance on littoral food sources that is inconsistent with a diet of filter-feeding M. mercenaria, even when calculated using the species-specific C fractionation factor derived from the laboratory experiment. Field-collected N. duplicata also show considerable isotopic overlap (N and C) with grazing Littorina littorea. For these reasons, we hypothesize that N. duplicata feeds on some combination of benthic primary producers (most likely macroalgae and/or epiphytic diatoms), carrion, and bivalve/gastropod tissue and discuss the possible identity of plants consumed.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Ecophenotypic shape variability within Astarte (Class: Bivalvia) from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain, U.S.A.: A study using geometric morphometrics

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2019

The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for testing hy... more The Atlantic Coastal Plain has long been recognized as a natural laboratory useful for testing hypotheses surrounding the environmental and ecological effects on marine fauna. To conduct these studies in a rigorous manner, a reliable taxonomy must be established for the organisms within this physiographic province. In this study, we focus on the bivalve genus Astarte, which is commonly found in this region, and has many formally recognized species. We test between two competing hypotheses for the unusually high species richness of this genus: 1) taxonomy-the presence of discrete morphotypes represent valid species within this genus; and, 2) ecology-the many recognized 'species' in this genus in fact represent ecophenotypic variants of a smaller number of species, and thus richness is inflated. We test between these two hypotheses using a geometric morphometric analysis of landmarks placed on 646 shells, representing six different taxa from the Pliocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain. We performed Procrustes transformation and Principle Components Analysis (PCA) on landmark data, allometric residuals, and outline harmonics to fully understand the variability of morphologies present. All PCA results show large amounts of overlap between all species. It is likely some of these species are valid taxonomic groups within the genus but should be classified as sub-species instead of separate species. These results provide strong support for our 'ecology' hypothesis, and suggests the genus Astarte needs revision. Future studies incorporating detailed sedimentological characteristics or ecological information (e.g., drilling frequency) will further elucidate palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental drivers of ecophenotypic variation present in this genus. Further, the accurate identification of fossil species has important implications for our ability to reconstruct biodiversity trends in relation to the emergence of the Central American Isthmus and subsequent changes in ocean circulation.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Conservation Paleobiology of Long Island Sound Mollusks

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Clumping behavior as a strategy against drilling predation: Implications for the fossil record

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, Dec 1, 2008

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Beyond memorization: an intermediate-level paleontology activity that integrates anatomy, ecology, and macroevolutionary theory using trilobites

Evolution: Education and Outreach, 2014

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Introduction to the Trilobites Laboratory

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact