Revealing rangeomorph species characters using spatial analyses

Author:

Mitchell Emily G.1,Kenchington Charlotte G.2,Harris Simon3,Wilby Philip R.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, United Kingdom.

2. Department of Earth Sciences, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, NL A1B 3X5, Canada.

3. British Geological Survey, Nicker Hill, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Rangeomorphs dominate the Ediacaran Avalonian macrofossil assemblages of Charnwood Forest, UK (∼562 Ma). However, their unfamiliar fractal architecture makes distinguishing phylogenetically reliable characters from intraspecific features difficult. Fortunately, spatial analysis of large in-situ populations offers an independent means of assessing their taxonomy. Populations of a single biological species are likely to exhibit similar spatial distributions due to their shared responses to the biological and ecological processes acting upon them. As such, spatial analyses can be used to interrogate which are the most taxonomically deductive characters in similar species. We used random labelling analyses to investigate the presence or absence of characters of Primocandelabrum boyntoni, P. aethelfalaedia, and P. aelfwynnia on the Bed ‘B’. The resultant spatial distributions were compared to observed characters using goodness-of-fit tests to determine which characters were associated with unique populations, and which were found across multiple populations. We found that P. boyntoni and P. aelfwynnia had statistically indistinguishable character distributions, suggesting that they represent a single biological species, and that they exhibited significantly different distributions to P. aethelfalaedia, suggesting that there are two (rather than three) species of Primocandelabrum present on the B surface. Furthermore, we found that the distribution of concealed versus unconcealed 1st order branches across all specimens exhibited significantly different density-dependant behaviour, with unconcealed branching occurring in areas of higher density populations and concealed branching occurring in the lower density areas of Primocandelabrum. We speculate that unconcealed branches may have been a response to the reduced availability of resources in higher density areas, implying rangeomorphs were capable of ecophenotypic responses.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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