Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology

To further our understanding on the evolution, selectivity, and ecological composition of marine communities following the latest Permian mass extinction, new collections from underrepresented regions in the immediate extinction aftermath are required. Here, we provide new systematic data and the fi...

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Main Authors: Foster, William J., Lehrmann, Daniel J., Hirtz, Jaime A., White, Mackenzie, Yu, Meiyi, Ji, Li, Martindale, Rowan C.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/5016411
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h
id ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:5016411
record_format openpolar
spelling ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:5016411 2023-06-06T11:53:14+02:00 Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology Foster, William J. Lehrmann, Daniel J. Hirtz, Jaime A. White, Mackenzie Yu, Meiyi Ji, Li Martindale, Rowan C. 2019-03-25 https://zenodo.org/record/5016411 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h unknown doi:10.1002/spp2.1252 https://zenodo.org/communities/dryad https://zenodo.org/record/5016411 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h oai:zenodo.org:5016411 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode Early Triassic info:eu-repo/semantics/other dataset 2019 ftzenodo https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h10.1002/spp2.1252 2023-04-13T21:32:59Z To further our understanding on the evolution, selectivity, and ecological composition of marine communities following the latest Permian mass extinction, new collections from underrepresented regions in the immediate extinction aftermath are required. Here, we provide new systematic data and the first palaeobiological account of the benthic invertebrate community from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China. We systematically describe 3 brachiopod species, 26 bivalve species, 11 gastropod species, 1 microconchid, and 1 crinoid species. The descriptions include five new species; two bivalve species (Hoernesia? danisae, Atomodesma? hautmanni) and three gastropod species (Donaldina erwini, Cossmannina alfischeri, and Vernelia samae). This is the most species-rich benthic community known so far from the extinction aftermath, which is typically characterised by a high proportion of Permian holdover genera and cosmopolitan taxa. Taxonomically, this community is different from coeval faunas with dissimilarity values > 60%. Ecologically, however, this fauna is similar to faunas from the Dolomites (Italy), and East Greenland. This new data, therefore, suggests that the lower Griesbachian invertebrate faunas were taxonomically heterogeneous, whereas ecologically they were relatively homogenous. The marine community on the Great Bank of Guizhou records genera that survived the mass extinction event with some, but not all, recording a size reduction, i.e., the Lilliput effect. The absence of large body fossils and the preferential survival of small species suggest that the mass extinction event was size-selective. GBG_Accession_numbersAccession numbers for the specimens identified in this study.H.parvus occurrencesOccurrences used for palaeoecological analysis Dataset East Greenland Greenland Zenodo Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Zenodo
op_collection_id ftzenodo
language unknown
topic Early Triassic
spellingShingle Early Triassic
Foster, William J.
Lehrmann, Daniel J.
Hirtz, Jaime A.
White, Mackenzie
Yu, Meiyi
Ji, Li
Martindale, Rowan C.
Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
topic_facet Early Triassic
description To further our understanding on the evolution, selectivity, and ecological composition of marine communities following the latest Permian mass extinction, new collections from underrepresented regions in the immediate extinction aftermath are required. Here, we provide new systematic data and the first palaeobiological account of the benthic invertebrate community from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China. We systematically describe 3 brachiopod species, 26 bivalve species, 11 gastropod species, 1 microconchid, and 1 crinoid species. The descriptions include five new species; two bivalve species (Hoernesia? danisae, Atomodesma? hautmanni) and three gastropod species (Donaldina erwini, Cossmannina alfischeri, and Vernelia samae). This is the most species-rich benthic community known so far from the extinction aftermath, which is typically characterised by a high proportion of Permian holdover genera and cosmopolitan taxa. Taxonomically, this community is different from coeval faunas with dissimilarity values > 60%. Ecologically, however, this fauna is similar to faunas from the Dolomites (Italy), and East Greenland. This new data, therefore, suggests that the lower Griesbachian invertebrate faunas were taxonomically heterogeneous, whereas ecologically they were relatively homogenous. The marine community on the Great Bank of Guizhou records genera that survived the mass extinction event with some, but not all, recording a size reduction, i.e., the Lilliput effect. The absence of large body fossils and the preferential survival of small species suggest that the mass extinction event was size-selective. GBG_Accession_numbersAccession numbers for the specimens identified in this study.H.parvus occurrencesOccurrences used for palaeoecological analysis
format Dataset
author Foster, William J.
Lehrmann, Daniel J.
Hirtz, Jaime A.
White, Mackenzie
Yu, Meiyi
Ji, Li
Martindale, Rowan C.
author_facet Foster, William J.
Lehrmann, Daniel J.
Hirtz, Jaime A.
White, Mackenzie
Yu, Meiyi
Ji, Li
Martindale, Rowan C.
author_sort Foster, William J.
title Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
title_short Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
title_full Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
title_fullStr Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Early Triassic benthic invertebrates from the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
title_sort data from: early triassic benthic invertebrates from the great bank of guizhou, south china: systematic palaeontology and palaeobiology
publishDate 2019
url https://zenodo.org/record/5016411
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre East Greenland
Greenland
genre_facet East Greenland
Greenland
op_relation doi:10.1002/spp2.1252
https://zenodo.org/communities/dryad
https://zenodo.org/record/5016411
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h
oai:zenodo.org:5016411
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.17c8h10.1002/spp2.1252
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