Abstract
Reefs are important hotspots of marine biodiversity today, and acted as cradles of diversification in the geological past. However, we know little about how the diversity of reef-supporting regions varied through deep time, and how this differed from other regions. We quantified regional diversity patterns in reef-supporting and non-reef-supporting regions in the fossil record of Phanerozoic marine invertebrates. Diversity in reef-supporting regions is on average two- to three-fold higher than in non-reef-supporting regions, and has been remarkably stable over timescales of tens to hundreds of millions of years. This signal is present in both reefal and non-reefal facies within reef-supporting regions, suggesting that reefs enriched diversity in surrounding environments. Sepkoski’s ‘Modern Fauna’, an assemblage of higher taxa that includes gastropods, bivalves and echinoids, has been a key component of reef-supporting regions since the Paleozoic, contrasting with its later rise to dominance in non-reef-supporting regions during the later Mesozoic–Cenozoic.
One-Sentence Summary Regions of the globe that supported reefal environments have been key hotspots of marine animal diversity for over 400 million years.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.