Supplementary material from "‘Conga lines’ of Ediacaran fronds: insights into the reproductive biology of early metazoans" ...

Late Ediacaran strata from Newfoundland, Canada (~574–560 Ma) document near-census palaeocommunities of some of the earliest metazoans. Such preservation enables reproductive strategies to be inferred from the spatial distribution of populations of fossilised benthic organisms, previously revealing...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Delahooke, Katie M., Stephenson, Nile P., Liu, Alexander G., Mitchell, Emily
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: The Royal Society 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7214462
https://rs.figshare.com/collections/Supplementary_material_from_Conga_lines_of_Ediacaran_fronds_insights_into_the_reproductive_biology_of_early_metazoans_/7214462
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Summary:Late Ediacaran strata from Newfoundland, Canada (~574–560 Ma) document near-census palaeocommunities of some of the earliest metazoans. Such preservation enables reproductive strategies to be inferred from the spatial distribution of populations of fossilised benthic organisms, previously revealing the existence of both propagule and stoloniferous reproductive modes amongst Ediacaran frondose taxa. Here we describe ‘conga lines’: linear arrangements of more than three closely spaced fossil specimens. We calculate probabilistic models of point maps of 13 fossil-bearing bedding surfaces, and show that four surfaces contain conga lines that are not the result of chance alignments. We then test whether these features could result from passive pelagic propagules settling in the lee of an existing frond, using computational fluid dynamics and discrete phase modelling. Under Ediacaran palaeoenvironmental conditions, preferential leeside settlement at the spatial scale of the conga lines is unlikely. We therefore ...