PALAIOS
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PALAIOS; October 2001; v. 16; no. 5; p. 507-523; DOI: 10.1669/0883-1351(2001)016<0507:OTDOTE>2.0.CO;2
© 2001 SEPM Society for Sedimentary Geology
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On the Demise of the Early Paleogene Morozovella velascoensis Lineage: Terminal Progenesis in the Planktonic Foraminifera

D. CLAY KELLY*,1, TIMOTHY J. BRALOWER2 and JAMES C. ZACHOS3

1 Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543
2 Department of Geology, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 25799
3 Earth Sciences Department, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 45064

The extinction of the Morozovella velascoensis lineage, a group of planktonic foraminifera that dominated tropical assemblages for ~6.3 m.y., is investigated using an upper Paleocene/lower Eocene section from the central Pacific Ocean (ODP Site 865). Uppermost stratigraphic occurrences of the lineage consist solely of diminutive M. edgari, a species roughly half the size of its ancestor, M. velascoensis. Eigenshape analysis indicates that adult specimens of M. edgari are morphologically similar to small, presumably juvenile, forms of M. velascoensis. The overall stratigraphic succession, where the uppermost occurrences of a lineage are represented by relict populations of minute, juvenilized forms, is consistent with a process called "terminal progenesis." Various lines of evidence indicate that stress-induced size reduction foreshadowed the extinction of other planktonic foraminiferal lineages as well.

The ecological cause(s) for the extinction of ancestral M. velascoensis is unclear. Stable isotopic evidence for a progressive deterioration of algal symbiosis was not detected. Specifically, none of the individually-analyzed shells of M. velascoensis were depleted significantly in 13C, nor was there a decrease in the covariance of the {delta}13C/size relationship.

Planktonic foraminiferal {delta}18O values exhibit a subtle increase over the stratigraphic interval in which the M. edgari extinction is recorded. This inferred tropical cooling appears to be correlative with terrestrial records of cooling from the North American continental interior and northwestern Europe. Thus, it is postulated that climatic variation during the earliest Eocene (~54.02Ma) played a significant role in shaping biodiversity in the pelagic realm, sealing the doom of the declining M. velascoensis lineage.




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H. K. Coxall, S. D'Hondt, and J. C. Zachos
Pelagic evolution and environmental recovery after the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction
Geology, April 1, 2006; 34(4): 297 - 300.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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