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Graptoloid evolutionary rates track Ordovician-Silurian global climate change

Roger A. Cooper, Peter M. Sadler, Axel Munnecke and James S. Crampton
Graptoloid evolutionary rates track Ordovician-Silurian global climate change (in Multidisciplinary studies of global Carboniferous stage boundaries; towards a better definition and global correlations, Chen Zhongqiang (editor), Wang Xiangdong (editor), Barry Richards (editor) and Markus Aretz (editor))
Geological Magazine (March 2014) 151 (2): 349-364

Abstract

Graptoloid evolutionary dynamics show a marked contrast from the Ordovician to the Silurian. Subdued extinction and origination rates during the Ordovician give way, during the late Katian, to rates that were highly volatile and of higher mean value through the Silurian, reflecting the significantly shorter lifespan of Silurian species. These patterns are revealed in high-resolution rate curves derived from the CONOP (constrained optimization) scaled and calibrated global composite sequence of 2094 graptoloid species. The end-Ordovician mass depletion was driven primarily by an elevated extinction rate which lasted for c. 1.2 Ma with two main spikes during the Hirnantian. The early Silurian recovery, although initiated by a peak in origination rate, was maintained by a complex interplay of origination and extinction rates, with both rates rising and falling sharply. The global delta (super 13) C curve echoes the graptoloid evolutionary rates pattern; the prominent and well-known positive isotope excursions during the Late Ordovician and Silurian lie on or close to times of sharp decline in graptoloid species richness, commonly associated with extinction rate spikes. The graptoloid and isotope data point to a relatively steady marine environment in the Ordovician with mainly background extinction rates, changing during the Katian to a more volatile climatic regime that prevailed through the Silurian, with several sharp extinction episodes triggered by environmental crises. The correlation of graptoloid species diversity with isotopic ratios was positive in the Ordovician and negative in the Silurian, suggesting different causal linkages. Throughout the history of the graptoloid clade all major depletions in species richness except for one were caused by elevated extinction rate rather than decreased origination rate.


ISSN: 0016-7568
EISSN: 1469-5081
Coden: GEMGA4
Serial Title: Geological Magazine
Serial Volume: 151
Serial Issue: 2
Title: Graptoloid evolutionary rates track Ordovician-Silurian global climate change
Title: Multidisciplinary studies of global Carboniferous stage boundaries; towards a better definition and global correlations
Author(s): Cooper, Roger A.Sadler, Peter M.Munnecke, AxelCrampton, James S.
Author(s): Chen Zhongqiangeditor
Author(s): Wang Xiangdongeditor
Author(s): Richards, Barryeditor
Author(s): Aretz, Markuseditor
Affiliation: GNS Science, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
Affiliation: China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, China
Pages: 349-364
Published: 201403
Text Language: English
Publisher: Cambridge University Press, London, United Kingdom
References: 100
Accession Number: 2014-027322
Categories: General paleontologyStratigraphy
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 2 tables
Secondary Affiliation: Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology, CHN, ChinaGeological Survey of Canada, CAN, CanadaUniversite de Toulouse, FRA, FranceUniversity of California at Riverside, USA, United StatesUniversity Erlangen-Nuremberg, DEU, Germany
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Cambridge University Press. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201417
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