Data from: Type Maastrichtian gastropod faunas evidencing rapid ecosystem recovery following the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary

The study of the global mass extinction event at the Cretaceous–Palaeogene (K/Pg) boundary can aid in understanding patterns of selective extinction and survival, and dynamics of ecosystem recovery. Outcrops in the Maastrichtian type area (southeast Netherlands, northeast Belgium) comprise an except...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vellekoop, Johan, Van Tilborgh, Kris, Van Knippenberg, Paul, Jagt, John, Stassen, Peter, Goolaerts, Stijn, Speijer, Robert
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/4979370
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.r7mh8sr
Description
Summary:The study of the global mass extinction event at the Cretaceous–Palaeogene (K/Pg) boundary can aid in understanding patterns of selective extinction and survival, and dynamics of ecosystem recovery. Outcrops in the Maastrichtian type area (southeast Netherlands, northeast Belgium) comprise an exceptionally expanded K/Pg boundary succession that offers a unique opportunity to study marine ecosystem recovery within the first thousands of years following the mass extinction event. A quantitative analyses was performed on systematically sampled macrofossils of the topmost Maastrichtian and lowermost Danian strata at the former Curfs-Ankerpoort quarry (Geulhem), which represent 'snapshots' of the latest Cretaceous and earliest Palaeogene marine ecosystems, respectively. Molluscs in particular are diverse and abundant in the studied succession. Regional ecosystem changes across the K/Pg boundary are relatively minor, showing a decline in suspension feeders, accompanied by an ecological shift to endobenthic molluscs. The earliest Paleocene gastropod assemblage retains many 'Maastrichtian' features and documents a fauna that temporarily survived into the Danian. The shallow, oligotrophic carbonate platform in this area was inhabited by taxa that were adapted to low nutrient levels and resistant to starvation. As a result, the local taxa were less affected by the short-lived detrimental conditions related to K/Pg boundary perturbations, such as darkness, cooling, starvation and ocean acidification. This resulted in relatively high survival rates, which enabled rapid recolonization and recovery of marine faunas in the Maastrichtian type area. DataData for manuscript. S1 Data; S2 Groups; S3 formgroups and ecology; S4 species ranges; S5 Tiering, feeding, motilityVellekoop et al SUPPORTING INFORMATIONsupporting information to manuscript