Яндекс.Метрика

E.G.Mitchell, N.I. Bobkov, N. Bykova,A.Dhunghana, N.G. Sozonov, A.V. Kolesnikov,A.G.Liu,T.Mustill,S.Xiao, D.V. Grazhdankin

Издание: British Ecological Society Annual Meeting (Belfast, Northern Ireland, 10th-13th December 2019)
Место издания: Belfast , Год издания: 2019
Страницы: 52-52

Аннотация

The broad-scale environment plays a substantial role in shaping modern marine ecosystems, but the degree to which palaeocommunities were influenced by their environment is unclear. To investigate how broad-scale environment influenced the community ecology of early animal ecosystems we employed spatial point process analyses to examine the community structure of seven bedding-plane assemblages of late Ediacaran age (558-550 Ma), drawn from a range of environmental settings and global localities. The studied palaeocommunities exhibit marked differences in the response of their component taxa to sub-metre-scale habitat heterogeneities on the seafloor. Shallow-marine palaeocommunities were heavily influenced by local habitat heterogeneities, in contrast to their deep-water counterparts. Lower species richness in deep-water Ediacaran assemblages compared to shallow-water counterparts across the studied time-interval could have been driven by this environmental patchiness, because habitat heterogeneities correspond to higher diversity in modern marine environments. The presence of grazers and detritivores within shallow-water communities may have promoted local patchiness, potentially initiating a chain of increasing heterogeneity of benthic communities from shallow to deep-marine depositional environments. Our results provide quantitative support for the "Savannah" hypothesis for early animal diversification - whereby Ediacaran diversification was driven by patchiness in the local benthic environment.
индекс в базе ИАЦ: 042019