First glimpse into Lower Jurassic deep-sea biodiversity: in situ diversification and resilience against extinction

Author:

Thuy Ben1,Kiel Steffen2,Dulai Alfréd3,Gale Andy S.4,Kroh Andreas5,Lord Alan R.6,Numberger-Thuy Lea D.1,Stöhr Sabine7,Wisshak Max8

Affiliation:

1. Natural History Museum Luxembourg, Department of Palaeontology, 24, rue Münster, Luxembourg 2160, Luxembourg

2. Geoscience Centre, Geobiology Group, University of Göttingen, Goldschmidtstrasse 3, Göttingen 37077, Germany

3. Hungarian Natural History Museum, Department of Palaeontology and Geology, 1431 Budapest, Pf. 137, Hungary

4. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Building, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO1 3QL, UK

5. Natural History Museum Vienna, Department of Geology and Palaeontology, Burgring 7, Vienna 1010, Austria

6. Senckenberg Research Institute, Micropalaeontology I, Senckenberganlage 25, Frankfurt 60325, Germany

7. Swedish Museum of Natural History, PO Box 50007, Stockholm 10405, Sweden

8. Senckenberg am Meer, Marine Research Department, Südstrand 40, Wilhelmshaven 26382, Germany

Abstract

Owing to the assumed lack of deep-sea macrofossils older than the Late Cretaceous, very little is known about the geological history of deep-sea communities, and most inference-based hypotheses argue for repeated recolonizations of the deep sea from shelf habitats following major palaeoceanographic perturbations. We present a fossil deep-sea assemblage of echinoderms, gastropods, brachiopods and ostracods, from the Early Jurassic of the Glasenbach Gorge, Austria, which includes the oldest known representatives of a number of extant deep-sea groups, and thus implies that in situ diversification, in contrast to immigration from shelf habitats, played a much greater role in shaping modern deep-sea biodiversity than previously thought. A comparison with coeval shelf assemblages reveals that, at least in some of the analysed groups, significantly more extant families/superfamilies have endured in the deep sea since the Early Jurassic than in the shelf seas, which suggests that deep-sea biota are more resilient against extinction than shallow-water ones. In addition, a number of extant deep-sea families/superfamilies found in the Glasenbach assemblage lack post-Jurassic shelf occurrences, implying that if there was a complete extinction of the deep-sea fauna followed by replacement from the shelf, it must have happened before the Late Jurassic.

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

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