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Bivalve body-size distribution through the Late Triassic mass extinction event

L. Felipe Opazo and Richard J. Twitchett
Bivalve body-size distribution through the Late Triassic mass extinction event
Paleobiology (July 2022) 48 (3): 420-445

Abstract

The synergic relationship between physiology, ecology, and evolutionary process makes the body-size distribution (BSD) an essential component of the community ecology. Body size is highly susceptible to environmental change, and extreme upheavals, such as during a mass extinction event, could exert drastic changes on a taxon's BSD. It has been hypothesized that the Late Triassic mass extinction event (LTE) was triggered by intense global warming, linked to massive volcanic activity associated with the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province. We test the effects of the LTE on the BSD of fossil bivalve assemblages from three study sites spanning the Triassic/Jurassic boundary in the United Kingdom. Our results show that the effects of the LTE were rapid and synchronous across sites, and the BSDs of the bivalves record drastic changes associated with species turnover. No phylogenetic signal of size selectivity was recorded, although semi-infaunal species were apparently most susceptible to change. Each size class had the same likelihood of extinction during the LTE, which resulted in a platykurtic BSD with negative skew. The immediate postextinction assemblage exhibits a leptokurtic BSD, although with negative skew, wherein surviving species and newly appearing small-sized colonizers exhibit body sizes near the modal size. Recovery was relatively rapid ( approximately 100 kyr), and larger bivalves began to appear during the pre-Planorbis Zone, despite recurrent dysoxic/anoxic conditions. This study demonstrates how a mass extinction acts across the size spectrum in bivalves and shows how BSDs emerge from evolutionary and ecological processes.


ISSN: 0094-8373
EISSN: 1938-5331
Coden: PALBBM
Serial Title: Paleobiology
Serial Volume: 48
Serial Issue: 3
Title: Bivalve body-size distribution through the Late Triassic mass extinction event
Affiliation: University of Florida, Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville, FL, United States
Pages: 420-445
Published: 202207
Text Language: English
Publisher: Paleontological Society, Lawrence, KS, United States
References: 158
Accession Number: 2022-047963
Categories: Invertebrate paleontology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 3 tables, sketch map
N54°51'00" - N54°51'00", W05°47'60" - W05°47'60"
N50°43'00" - N50°43'00", W02°58'00" - W02°58'00"
N51°10'00" - N51°10'00", W03°07'00" - W03°07'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Natural History Museum, GBR, United Kingdom
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2022, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, The Paleontological Society. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 202236

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