The Early Origin of the Antarctic Marine Fauna and Its Evolutionary Implications.

PLoS One

British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Published: October 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The geological records from Seymour Island reveal vital clues about the evolutionary history of modern polar marine species, specifically showing that 38 Southern Ocean molluscan genera can trace back origins to this area.
  • The study observes a major shift in molluscan diversity across the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, with a surge in gastropod diversity driven by a significant radiative event in the Neogastropoda clade linked to warming temperatures.
  • The expansion of neogastropods in early Paleogene Antarctica suggests that the region played a more complex role in evolutionary dynamics, challenging the notion that it was merely an evolutionary refuge during climate changes.

Article Abstract

The extensive Late Cretaceous - Early Paleogene sedimentary succession of Seymour Island, N.E. Antarctic Peninsula offers an unparalleled opportunity to examine the evolutionary origins of a modern polar marine fauna. Some 38 modern Southern Ocean molluscan genera (26 gastropods and 12 bivalves), representing approximately 18% of the total modern benthic molluscan fauna, can now be traced back through at least part of this sequence. As noted elsewhere in the world, the balance of the molluscan fauna changes sharply across the Cretaceous - Paleogene (K/Pg) boundary, with gastropods subsequently becoming more diverse than bivalves. A major reason for this is a significant radiation of the Neogastropoda, which today forms one of the most diverse clades in the sea. Buccinoidea is the dominant neogastropod superfamily in both the Paleocene Sobral Formation (SF) (56% of neogastropod genera) and Early - Middle Eocene La Meseta Formation (LMF) (47%), with the Conoidea (25%) being prominent for the first time in the latter. This radiation of Neogastropoda is linked to a significant pulse of global warming that reached at least 65°S, and terminates abruptly in the upper LMF in an extinction event that most likely heralds the onset of global cooling. It is also possible that the marked Early Paleogene expansion of neogastropods in Antarctica is in part due to a global increase in rates of origination following the K/Pg mass extinction event. The radiation of this and other clades at ∼65°S indicates that Antarctica was not necessarily an evolutionary refugium, or sink, in the Early - Middle Eocene. Evolutionary source - sink dynamics may have been significantly different between the Paleogene greenhouse and Neogene icehouse worlds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4262473PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0114743PLOS

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