A ‘taxonomic extinction’ results from arbitrary (but nonetheless necessary) change of generic names from an ancestral to a descendant stage within a continuous lineage. Such pseudoextinction will not be mistaken for the real termination of one lineage and the appearance of another, if the phylogenetic relationships are understood.
Result of Your Query
pseudoextinctionPseudoextinktion (ger.)
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The apparent extinction of a group of organisms whose descendants survive, but in a form modified by evolution (and hence are classified as a distinct group). (OED 2011)
- 1969
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Webb, S.D. (1969). Extinction-origination equilibria in late Cenozoic land mammals of North America. Evolution 23, 688-702: 692.
- 1971
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[Extinction of a species may also occur when phyletic changes have so accumulated that the organism is judged to be a new species; this type of extinction is called phyetic extinction.
Raup, D.M. & Stanley, S.M. (1971). Principles of Paleontology: 293; cf. 98.]
- 1971
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pseudoextinctionRaup, D.M. & Stanley, S.M. (1971). Principles of Paleontology: 330.
- 1975
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As Van Valen pointed out, his analysis ignored pseudoextinction: the termination of a group not by extinction in the literal sense but by transformation (phyletically) into another group.
Raup, D.M. (1975). Taxonomic survivorship curves and Van Valen’s law. Paleobiology 1, 82-96: 83.
- 2002
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Nearly all species terminate by true extinction and not by transformational passage into a descendant […] (a phenomenon called ‘pseudoextinction’ by paleontologists).
Gould, S.J. (2002). The Structue of Evolutionary Theory: 606.