Polyplacophoran Feeding Traces on Mediterranean Pliocene Sirenian Bones: Insights on the Role of Grazing Bioeroders in Shallow-Marine Vertebrate Falls

Author:

Collareta Alberto12ORCID,Merella Marco1,Casati Simone3,Di Cencio Andrea345,Tinelli Chiara1,Bianucci Giovanni12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento Scienze della Terra, Università di Pisa, Via S. Maria 53, 56126 Pisa, Italy

2. Museo di Storia Naturale, Università di Pisa, Via Roma 79, 56011 Calci, Italy

3. Gruppo Avis Mineralogia e Paleontologia Scandicci, Piazza Vittorio Veneto 1, 50018 Badia a Settimo, Italy

4. Studio Tecnico Geologia e Paleontologia, Via Fratelli Rosselli 4, 50026 San Casciano Val di Pesa, Italy

5. Istituto Comprensivo “Vasco Pratolini”, Via Guglielmo Marconi 11, 50018 Scandicci, Italy

Abstract

Chitons (Polyplacophora) include some of the most conspicuous bioeroders of the present-day shallow seas. Abundant palaeontological evidence for the feeding activity of ancient chitons is preserved in the form of radular traces that are usually found on invertebrate shells and hardgrounds. We report on widespread grazing traces occurring on partial skeletons of the extinct sirenian Metaxytherium subapenninum from the Lower Pliocene (Zanclean) of Arcille (Grosseto Province, Tuscany, Italy). These distinctive ichnofossils are described under the ichnotaxonomic name Osteocallis leonardii isp. nov. and interpreted as reflecting substrate scraping by polyplacophorans. A scrutiny of palaeontological literature reveals that similar traces occur on fossil vertebrates as old as the Upper Cretaceous, suggesting that bone has served as a substrate for chiton feeding for more than 66 million years. Whether these bone modifications reflect algal grazing, carrion scavenging or bone consumption remains unsure, but the first hypothesis appears to be the most parsimonious, as well as the most likely in light of the available actualistic data. As the role of bioerosion in controlling fossilization can hardly be overestimated, further research investigating how grazing organisms contribute to the biostratinomic processes affecting bone promises to disclose new information on how some marine vertebrates manage to become fossils.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Paleontology,Space and Planetary Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference70 articles.

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4. Features of intertidal bioerosion and bioconstruction on limestone coasts of Langkawi Islands, Malaysia;Leman;Sains Malays.,2015

5. On grazing traces produced by the radula of fossil and recent gastropods and chitons;Voigt;Geol. J.,1977

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