An asynchronous Mesozoic marine revolution: the Cenozoic intensification of predation on echinoids

Author:

Petsios Elizabeth1ORCID,Portell Roger W.2ORCID,Farrar Lyndsey3ORCID,Tennakoon Shamindri2ORCID,Grun Tobias B.2ORCID,Kowalewski Michal2ORCID,Tyler Carrie L.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97354, Waco, TX 76798-7354, USA

2. Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, 1659 Museum Road, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA

3. Department of Geology and Environmental Earth Science, Miami University, 250 S. Patterson Avenue, Oxford, OH 45056, USA

Abstract

Predation traces found on fossilized prey remains can be used to quantify the evolutionary history of biotic interactions. Fossil mollusc shells bearing these types of traces provided key evidence for the rise of predation during the Mesozoic marine revolution (MMR), an event thought to have reorganized global marine ecosystems. However, predation pressure on prey groups other than molluscs has not been explored adequately. Consequently, the ubiquity, tempo and synchronicity of the MMR cannot be thoroughly assessed. Here, we expand the evolutionary record of biotic interactions by compiling and analysing a new comprehensively collected database on drilling predation in Meso-Cenozoic echinoids. Trends in drilling frequency reveal an Eocene rise in drilling predation that postdated echinoid infaunalization and the rise in mollusc-targeted drilling (an iconic MMR event) by approximately 100 Myr. The temporal lag between echinoid infaunalization and the rise in drilling frequencies suggests that the Eocene upsurge in predation did not elicit a coevolutionary or escalatory response. This is consistent with rarity of fossil samples that record high frequency of drilling predation and scarcity of fossil prey recording failed predation events. These results suggest that predation intensification associated with the MMR was asynchronous across marine invertebrate taxa and represented a long and complex process that consisted of multiple uncoordinated steps probably with variable coevolutionary responses.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Paleontological Society, Miami University

Graduate School, Miami University Graduate Student Association

Paleontological Society

Florida Museum of Natural History

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference74 articles.

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