Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York u.a.
Plenum Pr.
1983
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Schriftenreihe: | Topics in geobiology
3 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVIII, 837 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 0306412926 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities |c ed. by Michael J. S. Tevesz ... |
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adam_text | Titel: Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities
Autor: Tevesz, Michael J.
Jahr: 1983
Contents
I. Recent Interactions and Their Preservation
Chapter i • Biotic Interactions in Recent Marine Sedimentary
Environments
Sarah Ann Woodin
1. Introduction ................................... 3
1.1. Common Units of Measure................... 5
1.2. Organisms ............................... 6
1.3. Categories of Infauna........................ 7
2. Competition ................................... 10
2.1. Competition in the Recent.................... 10
2.2. Competition in the Paleozoic................. 15
3. Predation ..................................... 19
3.1. Types of Predators in the Recent............... 19
3.2. Predation in the Paleozoic.................... 25
4. Pattern Differentiation: Competition or Predation?...... 27
5. Summary ..................................... 30
References .................................... 31
Chapter 2 • Biological Determinants of Present and Past Sessile
Animal Distributions
J. B. C. Jackson
1. Introduction ................................... 39
2. Organisms and Their Environments................. 41
3. Causes of Distributions........................... 45
3.1. The Larval Pool............................ 47
3.2. Larval Habitat Selection and Interactions with
Previously Settled Organisms................. 48
3.3. Competition .............................. 56
3.4. Predation ................................ 70
3.5. Mutualism ............................... 76
ix
X Contents
3.6. Life Histories ............................. 77
4. Fossil Evidence for Causes of Distributions............ 81
4.1. Some Criteria for Recognition of Past Habitat
Selection and Mortality Processes in Fossils...... 81
4.2. Examples of Ancient Interactions.............. 89
5. Conclusions ................................... 106
References .................................... 107
chapter 3 • Seasonality: Effects in Marine Benthic Communities
James W. Valentine
1. Introduction ................................... 121
1.1. Solar Radiation ........................... 123
1.2. Circulation............................... 125
2. Seasonal Parameters with Primary Density-Independent
Effects........................................ 127
2.1. Temperature.............................. 127
2.2. Salinity and Other Physical Variables .......... 131
2.3. Discussion ............................... 132
3. Seasonal Parameters with Primarily Density-Dependent
Effects........................................ 135
3.1. Light ................................... 135
3.2. Nutrient Elements ......................... 135
3.3. Primary Production ........................ 136
3.4. Discussion ............................... 141
4. Processes That Mediate Density-Dependent Effects...... 142
4.1. General Theory ........................... 142
4.2. Reproduction and Development: Seasonal
Strategies in z............................. 144
4.3. Niche Expansion: Seasonal Strategies in X....... 145
4.4. Discussion ............................... 146
5. Consequences for Biotic Patterns.................... 147
5.1. Diversity................................. 147
5.2. Composition.............................. 148
5.3. Interactions .............................. 151
References .................................... 152
Chapter 4 • Soft-Bottom Succession and the Fossil Record
Peter L. McCall and Michael J. S. Tevesz
1. Introduction ................................... 157
2. What Is Succession?............................. 158
Contents XI
3. What Use Is It?................................. 160
4. Nearshore Benthic Succession ..................... 161
4.1. Biotic Interactions ......................... 161
4.2. Study Area............................... 163
5. Succession in Other Environments.................. 169
6. Preservation of Soft-Bottom Succession............... 171
6.1. Taphonomic Losses and Mixing............... 171
6.2. Diagenesis ............................... 175
6.3. Comparison Of Life and Death Assemblages...... 176
7. Relation to Geologic Examples..................... 183
8. Concluding Remarks ............................ 187
References .................................... 188
chapter 5 • Taphonomic Feedback: Ecological Consequences of
Shell Accumulation
Susan M. Kidwell and David Jablonski
1. Introduction ................................... 195
2. Recent and Fossil Examples of Taphonomic Feedback. . . 196
2.1. Taphonomic Facilitation .................... 197
2.2. Taphonomic Inhibition ..................... 206
3. Expected Patterns in the Stratigraphic Record.......... 208
3.1. Sediment Aggradation ...................... 212
3.2. Sediment Starvation........................ 213
3.3. Sediment Bypassing........................ 215
3.4. Erosional Truncation ....................... 217
3.5. Discussion ............................... 218
4. Case Study: Neogene Chesapeake Group, Atlantic Coastal
Plain......................................... 220
4.1. Evidence of Taphonomic Feedback............. 223
4.2. Discussion ............................... 229
5. Conclusions ................................... 233
References .................................... 235
II. Interactions among Selected Taxa
chapter 6 • Biological Interactions and Precambrian Eukaryotes
Andrew H. Knoll
1. Introduction ................................... 251
2. Hypotheses of Eukaryotic Origins................... 253
Contents
3. A Scenario for Early Eukaryotic Evolution............ 258
4. The Fossil Record of Early Eukaryotes............... 264
4.1. Spot Cells.............................. 265
4.2. Tetrahedral Tetrads ........................ 268
4.3. Filamentous Microfossils .................... 268
4.4. Size Distribution Data ...................... 269
4.5. Acritarchs............................... 270
4.6. Vase-Shaped Microfossils.................... 273
4.7. Precambrian Macrofossils.................... 273
5. Ecological Consequences of Early Eukaryote Evolution. . . 274
6. Summary ..................................... 276
References .................................... 277
chapter 7 • Biotic Interactions and Siliceous Marine
Phytoplankton: An Ecological and Evolutionary
Perspective
Jennifer A. Kitchell
1. Introduction ................................... 285
2. Competition and Coexistence...................... 287
2.1. Nutrient Uptake Kinetics .................... 287
2.2. Coexistence of Competing Species............. 291
2.3. The Paradox of Enrichment .................. 294
2.4. Nonequilibrium Theories of Competitive
Coexistence............................... 296
3. Predator-Prey Interactions........................ 297
3.1. Predation as a Selective Force................. 297
3.2. Predation and the Maintenance of Diversity...... 302
3.3. Predation and the Sediment Record............ 303
4. Life History Strategies ........................... 304
5. Evolutionary Mode of Phytoplankton................ 309
6. Paleontological Applications ...................... 312
6.1. Competitive Displacement in Evolutionary
Time.................................... 313
6.2. Character Divergence and Convergence.......... 313
6.3. A Case Study............................. 314
References .................................... 320
chapter 8 • Biotic Interactions in Benthic Foraminifera
Jere H. Lipps
1. Introduction ................................... 331
Contents xiii
2. Trophic Interactions............................. 332
2.1. Food of Foraminifera ....................... 332
2.2. Trophic Mechanisms in Foraminifera........... 334
2.3. Consumption of Foraminifera by Other
Organisms................................ 352
3. Substrate Interactions............................ 359
3.1. Foraminifera as Epibionts.................... 359
3.2. Foraminfera as Substrata .................... 363
4. Competition ................................... 363
5. Bioturbation ................................... 364
6. Taphonomic Aspects of Foraminiferal Biotic
Interactions.................................... 366
7. Future Studies ................................. 369
References .................................... 370
Chapter 9 • Biotic Interactions among Recent and among Fossil
Crinoids
David L. Meyer and William I. Ausich
1. Introduction ................................... 378
2. Predation ..................................... 378
2.1. Sources of Predation on Living Crinoids......... 378
2.2. Possible Antipredator Adaptations of Living
Crinoids................................. 380
2.3. Predation on Ancient Crinoids................ 381
2.4. Possible Antipredator Morphology in Ancient
Crinoids................................. 383
2.5. Regeneration and Nonlethal Predation.......... 385
3. Competition ................................... 385
3.1. Possible Mechanisms of Competition........... 387
3.2. Niche Differentiation among Living and among
Ancient Crinoids........................... 388
4. Associations of Living Crinoids with Other
Organisms..................................... 392
4.1. Polychaetes .............................. 395
4.2. Molluscs................................. 396
4.3. Crustaceans .............................. 396
4.4. Fishes................................... 397
5. Associations of Ancient Crinoids with Other
Organisms..................................... 398
5.1. Nature of Associations...................... 398
5.2. Commensalism............................ 399
5.3. Stereomic Malformations .................... 406
Contents
5.4. Crinoids as Epizoans ....................... 411
5.5. Parasitism ............................... 412
6. Other Interactions .............................. 414
7. Habitat Modification by Crinoids................... 415
7.1. Contribution to Sediment.................... 415
7.2. Effects on Substrata ........................ 416
7.3. Consequences for Community Succession........ 418
8. Role of Biotic Interactions in Crinoid Evolution........ 418
References .................................... 420
III. Biotic Interactions through Time
chapter io • Algal Symbiosis and Its Recognition in the Fossil
Record
Richard Cowen
1. Symbiosis..................................... 431
2. Algal Symbiosis ................................ 432
2.1. The Algal Symbionts ....................... 433
2.2. Phyletic Distribution of Hosts of Algal
Symbionts................................ 435
2.3. Geographical and Ecological Distribution........ 435
3. The Origin of Algal Symbiosis..................... 436
4. Characters Associated with Symbiosis................ 439
4.1. Characters That Promote Symbiosis............ 440
4.2. Characters That Result from Symbiosis.......... 446
5. Recognition of Algal Symbiosis in the Fossil Record..... 449
5.1. Usable Criteria ............................ 449
5.2. Fossil Corals.............................. 453
5.3. Fossil Foraminifera ........................ 454
5.4. Fossil Cardiacean Bivalves................... 456
5.5. Rudist Bivalves ........................... 456
5.6. Other Large Bivalves ....................... 460
5.7. Recalcitrant Groups: The Planktonic Syndrome . . . 462
6. Case Study of Symbiosis in Permian Brachiopods....... 462
6.1. The Feeding Mechanism of the
Richthofeniacea............................ 463
6.2. Symbiosis in the Richthofeniacea.............. 465
6.3. Symbiosis in the Teguliferinidae .............. 471
6.4. Symbiosis in the Lyttoniacea ................. 472
6.5. The Origins of Symbiosis in Brachiopods........ 473
References .................................... 474
Contents XV
chapter ii • Sediment-Mediated Biological Disturbance and the
Evolution of Marine Benthos
Charles W. Thayer
1. Introduction ................................... 480
2. Disturbance of Recent Sediments: Villains, Victims and
Modi Operandi................................. 481
2.1. Definition................................ 487
2.2. Modes of Sediment-Mediated Interaction........ 487
2.3. Ranking of Modes of Disturbance.............. 490
2.4. Effects of Bulldozing on IMOUS............... 500
2.5. Determinants of Bioturbation Rates ............ 501
2.6. Significance of Trophic Group Amensalism...... 505
3. Rise of the Bulldozers: Paleontological Perspective and
Neontological Insight............................. 507
3.1. Diversification and Deductions from Recent
Reworking................................ 507
3.2. Evidence from Morphology, Traces, and Behavior
........................................ 517
4. More Evidence from Trace Fossils: Tracking Villains
through Geologic Time........................... 520
5. Physical Disturbance and Biotic Stabilization: How
Shifting Were the Sands of Time?................... 522
6. Phanerozoic Patterns: Restructuring the Benthos........ 524
6.1. Brachiopods .............................. 531
6.2. Bivalves ................................. 535
6.3. Other Taxa............................... 536
6.4. Statistical Summary of Diversity Data........... 537
6.5. Abundant Taxa............................ 539
6.6. Abundance............................... 539
6.7. Conclusion............................... 544
7. Extinctions .................................... 544
8. Archaic IMOUS in Recent Refugia: Avoiding the
Bulldozers..................................... 547
8.1. Hard Substrata ............................ 547
8.2. Mobility ................................. 548
8.3. Deep Sea ................................ 549
8.4. Littoral Zone ............................. 552
8.5. Refuge in Size ............................ 552
8.6. Corals: Refugia in Excelcis................... 553
9. Geological and Paleontological Consequences ......... 553
9.1. Sedimentology and Stratigraphy............... 553
9.2. Biogeochemistry........................... 554
XVI Contents
9.3. Preservation of Fossils ...................... 555
10. Speculation on Causes and Consequences............. 557
10.1. Land Plants and Their Ramifications............ 557
10.2. Other Causes ............................. 558
10.3. Infaunal vs. Epifaunal Suspension-Feeders....... 559
10.4. Diversity................................. 560
10.5. Brachiopods .............................. 560
10.6. Substrate Specificity ....................... 561
10.7. Hardgrounds ............................. 561
11. Discussion .................................... 562
11.1. Potential Bias............................. 562
11.2. Alternatives .............................. 563
11.3. Implications for Paleoecologic Methods: Generic
Duration, Diversity, and Abundance............ 564
11.4. Random Patterns?.......................... 565
11.5. Future Work.............................. 566
Appendices ................................... 568-
References .................................... 595
chapter 12 • The Evolution of Infaunal Communities and
Sedimentary Fabrics
David W. Larson and Donald C. Rhoads
1. Introduction ................................... 627
2. Infaunal Life and Sediment Reworking............... 628
3. Comparison of Sedimentary Fabrics................. 629
3.1. Sedimentary Facies ........................ 631
3.2. Effect of Bioturbation....................... 633
4. Discussion .................................... 642
4.1. Additional Evidence ....................... 642
4.2. Evolution of Infaunal Communities ............ 642
5. Conclusions ................................... 646
References .................................... 646
Chapter 13 • Shell-Breaking Predation through Time
Geerat J. Vermeij
1. Introduction ................................... 649
2. Breakage as Agent of Mortality and Selection.......... 650
3. Adaptations against Breakage...................... 652
4. Gastropod Shell Form through Geological Time........ 655
Contents XVii
5. Armor in Other Groups........................... 660
6. The Geological Record of Shell-Breakers.............. 661
7. Alternative and Additional Interpretations............ 663
References .................................... 664
IV. Effects of Interactions on Community Evolution
chapter 14 • Diversification, Faunal Change, and Community
Replacement during the Ordovician Radiations
J. John Sepkoski, Jr., and Peter M. Sheehan
1. Introduction ................................... 673
2. Patterns of Diversification and Faunal Change during the
Ordovician.................................... 674
2.1. Global Diversity and the Three Great
Evolutionary Faunas ....................... 675
2.2. Modeling Paleozoic Diversity Patterns.......... 680
3. Distributional Ecology of the Ordovician Radiations..... 684
3.1. Data .................................... 684
3.2. Analytic Methodology ...................... 687
3.3. Cluster Analysis of Cambro-Ordovician
Communities.............................. 689
3.4. Factor Analysis of Cambro-Ordovician
Communities.............................. 695
4. Discussion .................................... 697
4.1. Generality of Results ....................... 699
4.2. Mechanisms of Onshore-Offshore Change....... 701
5. Summary ..................................... 705
Appendix..................................... 707
References .................................... 710
Chapter is • Ecospace Utilization and Guilds in Marine
Communities through the Phanerozoic
R. K. Bambach
1. Introduction ................................... 719
1.1. Diversity Change through the Phanerozoic....... 720
1.2. The Question of an Ecologic Role in Controlling
Diversity Patterns.......................... 721
2. General Pattern of Ecospace Utilization............... 722
XV111 Contents
2.1. Turnover of Class-Level Taxa through Time...... 722
2.2. Change in General Ecospace Utilization......... 725
3. The Guild Concept and Its Application to
Paleocommunities............................... 728
3.1. Extension of the Guild Concept................ 728
3.2. Defining Guilds in Paleocommunities........... 730
4. Guilds in Paleocommunities....................... 733
4.1. The Data................................. 733
4.2. Differences in Guild Structures of Paleozoic and
Neogene Communities....................... 733
4.3. Similarities in Species Distribution within
Guilds................................... 736
4.4. Superguilds ............................ 740
5. Conclusions ................................... 742
References .................................... 744
chapter 16 • Soft-Bottom Epifaunal Suspension-Feeding
Assemblages in the Late Cretaceous: Implications
for the Evolution of Benthic Paleocommunities
David Jablonski and David T. Bottjer
1. Introduction ................................... 747
2. Late Cretaceous Offshore Benthic Assemblages......... 749
2.1. Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plain................ 749
2.2. Other Chalk Faunas ........................ 762
3. Late Cretaceous Nearshore Benthic Assemblages........ 771
3.1. Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plain................ 771
3.2. Other Nearshore Faunas..................... 775
4. Structure of Late Cretaceous Assemblages............. 776
4.1. The Ecologic Pattern........................ 776
4.2. The Taphonomic Overprint................... 778
5. Evolutionary History and Mechanisms............... 781
5.1. Evolutionary History ....................... 781
5.2. Evolutionary Mechanisms ................... 787
6. Conclusions ................................... 793
References .................................... 795
Index ........................................ 797
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV000145683 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T15:09:22Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0306412926 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-000081127 |
oclc_num | 9682565 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-83 DE-188 DE-29 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-83 DE-188 DE-29 |
physical | XVIII, 837 S. Ill. |
psigel | TUB-nseb |
publishDate | 1983 |
publishDateSearch | 1983 |
publishDateSort | 1983 |
publisher | Plenum Pr. |
record_format | marc |
series | Topics in geobiology |
series2 | Topics in geobiology |
spelling | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities ed. by Michael J. S. Tevesz ... New York u.a. Plenum Pr. 1983 XVIII, 837 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Topics in geobiology 3 Biocénoses Paléoécologie Biotic communities Paleoecology Tiere (DE-588)4060087-7 gnd rswk-swf Wechselwirkung (DE-588)4064937-4 gnd rswk-swf Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 gnd rswk-swf Meer (DE-588)4038301-5 gnd rswk-swf Benthos (DE-588)4140346-0 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Benthos (DE-588)4140346-0 s Meer (DE-588)4038301-5 s Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 s Tiere (DE-588)4060087-7 s Wechselwirkung (DE-588)4064937-4 s DE-604 Tevesz, Michael J. Sonstige oth Topics in geobiology 3 (DE-604)BV000002454 3 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=000081127&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities Topics in geobiology Biocénoses Paléoécologie Biotic communities Paleoecology Tiere (DE-588)4060087-7 gnd Wechselwirkung (DE-588)4064937-4 gnd Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 gnd Meer (DE-588)4038301-5 gnd Benthos (DE-588)4140346-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4060087-7 (DE-588)4064937-4 (DE-588)4045539-7 (DE-588)4038301-5 (DE-588)4140346-0 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities |
title_auth | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities |
title_exact_search | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities |
title_full | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities ed. by Michael J. S. Tevesz ... |
title_fullStr | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities ed. by Michael J. S. Tevesz ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities ed. by Michael J. S. Tevesz ... |
title_short | Biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities |
title_sort | biotic interactions in recent and fossil benthic communities |
topic | Biocénoses Paléoécologie Biotic communities Paleoecology Tiere (DE-588)4060087-7 gnd Wechselwirkung (DE-588)4064937-4 gnd Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 gnd Meer (DE-588)4038301-5 gnd Benthos (DE-588)4140346-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Biocénoses Paléoécologie Biotic communities Paleoecology Tiere Wechselwirkung Pflanzen Meer Benthos Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=000081127&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000002454 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT teveszmichaelj bioticinteractionsinrecentandfossilbenthiccommunities |