Affiliation:
1. Museum of Nature South Tyrol Bindergasse 1 39100 Bozen/Bolzano Italy
2. Museum Ladin Ćiastel de Tor Torstrasse 65 39030 St Martin in Thurn Italy
3. Dipartimento di Fisica e Scienze della Terra Università di Ferrara Via Saragat 1 44121 Ferrara Italy
Abstract
AbstractDiverse shallow marine fossil assemblages from the Changhsingian Bellerophon Formation (Dolomites) record late Palaeozoic marine life immediately before the end‐Permian mass extinction. We classified c. 6500 bivalves from western Dolomites localities, identifying 26 species including one new family (Ladinomyidae), three new genera (Ladinomya, Lovaralucina, Gardenapecten) and 10 new species: Acharax frenademezi, Bakevellia (Bakevellia) preromangica, Edmondia hautmanni, Etheripecten stuflesseri, Ladinomya fosteri, Lovaralucina covidi, Palaeolima badiotica, Promytilus merlai, Tambanella? stetteneckensis and Volsellina carinata. The occurrence of three Eumorphotis species with different stratigraphic distributions, leads us to propose an upper Permian ‘Lower Eumorphotis Zone’, divided into E. praecurrens, E. striatocostata and E. lorigae subzones, and distinct from the existing Lower Triassic Eumorphotis Zone (here renamed ‘Upper Eumorphotis Zone’). Palaeoecological analysis produced six biofacies and four ecofacies, based on richness, dominance and ecological lifestyle. The bivalves inhabited lagoonal to nearshore environments affected by stressed conditions: high temperatures, high salinity, shallow water depths, low oxygen and high terrigenous input. The upper Bellerophon Fm is characterized by increasingly fully marine conditions, although eurytopic taxa still suggest stressed conditions. Bivalve richness of the upper Permian Bellerophon and Lower Triassic Werfen formations was compared to estimate the genus‐level extinction rate. The disappearance of almost half (47%) of Bellerophon Fm genera is remarkably low compared with other, coeval bivalve faunas. Pre‐extinction bivalve faunas were dominated by stress‐adapted taxa (Unionites, Eumorphotis, Bakevellia, Towapteria) able to thrive in extreme environmental conditions, survive the end‐Permian mass extinction, and become the dominant biotic component of Lower Triassic benthic communities globally.
Reference270 articles.
1. Guild-Structure and Evolution of Mesozoic Benthic Shelf Communities
2. Aberhan M. Alroy J. Fursich F. T. Kiessling W. Kosnik M. Madin J. Patzkowsky M.andWagner P.2004.Ecological attributes of marine invertebrates. Unpublished database.https://paleobiodb.org
3. Calcareous algae from the Upper Permian of the Dolomites (Italy) with stratigraphy of the ʻBellerophon‐Zoneʼ;Accordi B.;Journal of Palaeontological Society India,1956
4. Palaeo-oxygenation: effects and recognition
5. Ueber die Anthracosien der Permformation Russlands;Amalizky W.;Palaeontographica,1892
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献