Devonian Climate, Sea Level and Evolutionary Events

The geological and palaeontological records of climate change and evolutionary events reflect Earth’s widely fluctuating climate systems. Past climates hold the clues to understanding future developments. In this context, research on linked climate, biodiversity and sea-level fluctuations of the Devonian contributes to the general knowledge of deep-time climate dynamics. A fruitful co-operation between the International Geoscience Programme IGCP 596 and the International Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy (SDS) addressed the complex succession of climate-linked Devonian global events of varying magnitude. The primary goal of IGCP 596 was to assess mid-Palaeozoic climate changes and their impact on marine and terrestrial biodiversity using an interdisciplinary approach. The focus of SDS includes a revision of the eustatic sea-level curve and the integration of refined chrono- and biostratigraphy with modern chemo-, magneto-, cyclo-, event- and sequence stratigraphy. This enabled the much improved dating and correlation of abiotic perturbations, evolutionary changes, organism and ecosystem ranges. Results by 37 authors are presented in 14 chapters, which cover the entire Devonian.
The effect of environmental changes on the evolution and extinction of Late Devonian trilobites from the northern Canning Basin, Western Australia
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Published:January 01, 2016
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CiteCitation
Kenneth J. McNamara, Raimund Feist, 2016. "The effect of environmental changes on the evolution and extinction of Late Devonian trilobites from the northern Canning Basin, Western Australia", Devonian Climate, Sea Level and Evolutionary Events, R. T. Becker, P. Königshof, C. E. Brett
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Abstract
The Frasnian–Famennian Virgin Hills Formation represents fore-reef facies deposited as part of the extensive Late Devonian reef system that fringed the SW Kimberley Block in Western Australia. It contains a rich trilobite fauna dominated primarily by proetids and, to a lesser extent, harpetids, phacopids, scutelluids and odontopleurids. To date, 49 taxa have been described, 40 of these being restricted to the Frasnian. Herein five Frasnian taxa are described, three in open nomenclature, and two the new species Telopeltis intermedia and Otarion fugitivum. Evolutionary trends in the Virgin Hills trilobites are dominated by a reduction in body size and eye size and, to a lesser extent, a reduction in exoskeletal vaulting. Although recording no sedimentological signature, the fauna was strongly affected by the two globally recognized Kellwasser extinction events. The first, at the end of conodont Zone 12, affected taxa at the species and genus level. The second, within Zone 13b, had a much greater impact on the fauna, causing extinctions at the familial and ordinal levels. Evidence is presented to suggest that evolutionary trends in the trilobites during the late Frasnian reflect selection for forms adapted to low nutrient conditions. The two intensive Kellwasser extinction episodes may reflect periodic massive inputs of nutrients from the terrestrial into the shallow-marine environment.
- adaptation
- adaptive radiation
- anatomy
- Arthropoda
- assemblages
- Australasia
- Australia
- biochronology
- biodiversity
- biologic evolution
- biostratigraphy
- biozones
- Canning Basin
- correlation
- depositional environment
- Devonian
- ecosystems
- exoskeletons
- extinct taxa
- eyes
- Famennian
- faunal studies
- Frasnian
- functional morphology
- Invertebrata
- Kellwasser event
- Kimberley Basin
- Lennard Shelf
- mass extinctions
- mechanism
- morphology
- new taxa
- nutrients
- Odontopleurida
- oligotrophic environment
- ontogeny
- paleoecology
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- Phacopida
- phenotypes
- phylogeny
- Proetidae
- Ptychopariida
- range
- reef environment
- Scutelluidae
- sea-level changes
- size
- species diversity
- taxonomy
- Trilobita
- Trilobitomorpha
- Upper Devonian
- Western Australia
- Virgin Hills Formation
- Aulacopleuridae
- Tropidocoryphidae
- Lawford Range
- McWhae Ridge
- Harpetida
- peramorphosis
- Otarion fugitivum
- Telopeltis intermedia