Much of the work carried out by
palaeontologists studying evolutionary radiations has been using marine
invertebrate fossils simply because these tend to be much more numerous and easy to collect in quantity than large land
vertebrates such as
mammals or
dinosaurs.
Brachiopods, for example, underwent major bursts of evolutionary radiation in the Early
Cambrian, Early
Ordovician, to a lesser degree throughout the
Silurian and
Devonian, and then again during the
Carboniferous and earliest
Permian. During these periods, different
species of brachiopods independently assumed a similar morphology, and presumably mode of life, to species that had lived millions of years before. This phenomenon, known as homeomorphy, is explained by
convergent evolution: when subjected to similar selective pressures, organisms will often evolve similar adaptations. Further examples of rapid evolutionary radiation can be observed among
ammonites, which suffered a series of extinctions from which they repeatedly re-diversified; and
trilobites which, during the Cambrian, rapidly evolved into a variety of forms occupying many of the
niches exploited by
crustaceans today. ==Recent examples==