Phenotypic disparity

Birds have greater species richness than mammals, while mammals are relatively more diverse in morphology.[1]

Phenotypic disparity, also known as morphological diversity, morphological variety, morphological disparity, morphodisparity or simply disparity, refers to the variation of observable characteristics within biological groups. It was originally proposed in paleontology, and has also been introduced into the study of extant organisms. Some biologists view phenotypic disparity as an important aspect of biodiversity, while others believe that they are two different concepts.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Minelli2019 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).