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CBER External Seminar - Dr Lewis Jones, UCL

18 November 2024, 1:00 pm–2:00 pm

Title: ‘Mind the Gap: Reconstructing Marine Biodiversity Through Time and Space’

Event Information

Open to

All | UCL staff | UCL students | UCL alumni

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Amy Godfrey

Abstract: The fossil record provides the only direct empirical evidence of how biodiversity has varied over geological timescales, offering a unique perspective on long-term diversification and its underlying drivers. However, this archive is inherently incomplete and impacted by a suite of preservational and sampling biases that can obscure ‘true’ patterns and processes. In this seminar, I will explore these challenges through a series of case studies that highlight the difficulties of reconstructing palaeobiogeographic patterns. Specifically, I will demonstrate how incomplete and uneven spatial sampling can distort our understanding of the distribution of life in deep time, and its potential drivers. Subsequently, I will present how by integrating interdisciplinary approaches—including ecological and Earth system modelling, along with fossil occurrence datasets—we can achieve a more nuanced view of biodiversity and its drivers through deep time. While the seminar will focus on the fossil record of marine invertebrates and the reconstruction of latitudinal trends in biodiversity, the principles discussed are equally relevant to terrestrial organisms. I will conclude by introducing the research I plan to carry out here at University College London, focused on reconstructing the evolutionary history of Cenozoic marine biodiversity hotspots and testing their long-term drivers.

About the Speaker

Dr Lewis Jones

NERC Independent Research Fellowship at University College London


Bio: Lewis A. Jones is a Palaeobiologist examining the macroecological and macroevolutionary history of reef-building organisms through the integration of interdisciplinary tools and diverse sources of information, such as ecological modelling, Earth System modelling, and fossil and extant occurrence datasets. An additional theme of his research is evaluating the influence of data incompleteness on our perceptions of the geological past, such as biodiversity trends. He also works on developing open-source software tools and resources for the palaeobiological community with the aim of improving research reproducibility in the field. Lewis recently started a NERC Independent Research Fellowship within the Department of Earth Sciences at University College London, where he is focused on reconstructing the evolutionary history of Cenozoic marine biodiversity hotspots and testing their long-term drivers.