Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods

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Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods. / Harper, David A. T.; Mac Ørum Rasmussen, Christian; Liljeroth, Maria; Blodgett, Robert B.; Candela, Yves; Jin, Jisuo; Percival, Ian G.; Rong, Jia Yu; Villas, Enrique; Zhan, Ren Bin.

Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography. ed. / D. A. T. Harper; T. Servais. Geological Society, 2013. p. 127-144 (Geological Society of London. Memoirs; No. 38).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Harper, DAT, Mac Ørum Rasmussen, C, Liljeroth, M, Blodgett, RB, Candela, Y, Jin, J, Percival, IG, Rong, JY, Villas, E & Zhan, RB 2013, Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods. in DAT Harper & T Servais (eds), Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography. Geological Society, Geological Society of London. Memoirs, no. 38, pp. 127-144. https://doi.org/10.1144/M38.11

APA

Harper, D. A. T., Mac Ørum Rasmussen, C., Liljeroth, M., Blodgett, R. B., Candela, Y., Jin, J., Percival, I. G., Rong, J. Y., Villas, E., & Zhan, R. B. (2013). Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods. In D. A. T. Harper, & T. Servais (Eds.), Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography (pp. 127-144). Geological Society. Geological Society of London. Memoirs No. 38 https://doi.org/10.1144/M38.11

Vancouver

Harper DAT, Mac Ørum Rasmussen C, Liljeroth M, Blodgett RB, Candela Y, Jin J et al. Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods. In Harper DAT, Servais T, editors, Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography. Geological Society. 2013. p. 127-144. (Geological Society of London. Memoirs; No. 38). https://doi.org/10.1144/M38.11

Author

Harper, David A. T. ; Mac Ørum Rasmussen, Christian ; Liljeroth, Maria ; Blodgett, Robert B. ; Candela, Yves ; Jin, Jisuo ; Percival, Ian G. ; Rong, Jia Yu ; Villas, Enrique ; Zhan, Ren Bin. / Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods. Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography. editor / D. A. T. Harper ; T. Servais. Geological Society, 2013. pp. 127-144 (Geological Society of London. Memoirs; No. 38).

Bibtex

@inbook{37264e8e3b494b5caa5733a90a76db06,
title = "Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods",
abstract = "The phylogeographical evolution and the consequent changing distribution and diversity of rhynchonelliform brachiopods through the Ordovician are linked to the dynamic palaeogeography of the period. The Early Ordovician (Tremadocian and Floian) is characterized by globally low-diversity faunas with local biodiversity epicentres, notably on the South China Palaeoplate; low-latitude porambonitoid-dominated faunas with early plectambonitoid and clitambonitoid representatives, as well as high-latitude assemblages mostly dominated by orthoids, can be recognized, but many taxa are rooted in Late Cambrian stocks. The Early Ordovician displays a steady increase in rhynchonelliformean biodiversity, which was mostly driven by the increasing success of the Porambonitoidea and Orthoidea, but the billingsellids and early plectambonitoids also contributed to this expansion. During the Early to Mid Ordovician (Dapingian-Darriwilian), marine life experienced an unprecedented hike in diversity at the species, genus and family levels that firmly installed the suspension-feeding benthos as the main component of the Palaeozoic fauna. However, this may have occurred in response to an early Darriwilian annihilation of existing clades, some of which had been most successful during the Early Ordovician. New clades rapidly expanded. The continents were widely dispersed together with a large number of microcontinents and volcanic arcs related to intense magmatic and tectonic activity. Climates were warm and sea-levels were high. Pivotal to the entire diversification is the role of gamma (inter-provincial) diversity and by implication the spread of the continents and frequency of island arcs and microcontinents. The phylogeographical analysis demonstrates that this new palaeogeographical configuration was particularly well explored and utilized by the strophomenides, especially the Plectambonitoidea, which radiated rapidly during this interval. The porambonitoids, on the other hand, were still in recovery following the early Darriwilian extinctions. Orthides remained dominant, particularly at high latitudes. Biodiversity epicentres were located on most of the larger palaeoplates, as well as within the Iapetus Ocean. Provincial patterns were disrupted during the Sandbian and early Katian with the migration of many elements of the benthos into deeper-water regimes, enjoying a more cosmopolitan distribution. Later Katian faunas exhibit a partition between carbonate and clastic environments. During the latest Katian, biogeographical patterns were disrupted by polewards migrations of warm-water taxa in response to the changing climate; possibly as a consequence of low-latitude cradles being developed in, for instance, carbonate reef settings. Many clades were well established with especially the strophomenides beginning to outnumber the previously successful orthides, although this process had already begun, regionally, in the mid to late Darriwilian. At the same time, atrypoid and pentameroid clades also began to radiate in low-latitude faunas, anticipating their dominance in Silurian faunas. The Hirnantian was marked by severe extinctions particularly across orthidestrophomenide clades within the context of few, but well-defined, climatically controlled provincial belts.",
author = "Harper, {David A. T.} and {Mac {\O}rum Rasmussen}, Christian and Maria Liljeroth and Blodgett, {Robert B.} and Yves Candela and Jisuo Jin and Percival, {Ian G.} and Rong, {Jia Yu} and Enrique Villas and Zhan, {Ren Bin}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1144/M38.11",
language = "English",
series = "Geological Society of London. Memoirs",
publisher = "Geological Society",
number = "38",
pages = "127--144",
editor = "Harper, {D. A. T.} and T. Servais",
booktitle = "Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods

AU - Harper, David A. T.

AU - Mac Ørum Rasmussen, Christian

AU - Liljeroth, Maria

AU - Blodgett, Robert B.

AU - Candela, Yves

AU - Jin, Jisuo

AU - Percival, Ian G.

AU - Rong, Jia Yu

AU - Villas, Enrique

AU - Zhan, Ren Bin

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - The phylogeographical evolution and the consequent changing distribution and diversity of rhynchonelliform brachiopods through the Ordovician are linked to the dynamic palaeogeography of the period. The Early Ordovician (Tremadocian and Floian) is characterized by globally low-diversity faunas with local biodiversity epicentres, notably on the South China Palaeoplate; low-latitude porambonitoid-dominated faunas with early plectambonitoid and clitambonitoid representatives, as well as high-latitude assemblages mostly dominated by orthoids, can be recognized, but many taxa are rooted in Late Cambrian stocks. The Early Ordovician displays a steady increase in rhynchonelliformean biodiversity, which was mostly driven by the increasing success of the Porambonitoidea and Orthoidea, but the billingsellids and early plectambonitoids also contributed to this expansion. During the Early to Mid Ordovician (Dapingian-Darriwilian), marine life experienced an unprecedented hike in diversity at the species, genus and family levels that firmly installed the suspension-feeding benthos as the main component of the Palaeozoic fauna. However, this may have occurred in response to an early Darriwilian annihilation of existing clades, some of which had been most successful during the Early Ordovician. New clades rapidly expanded. The continents were widely dispersed together with a large number of microcontinents and volcanic arcs related to intense magmatic and tectonic activity. Climates were warm and sea-levels were high. Pivotal to the entire diversification is the role of gamma (inter-provincial) diversity and by implication the spread of the continents and frequency of island arcs and microcontinents. The phylogeographical analysis demonstrates that this new palaeogeographical configuration was particularly well explored and utilized by the strophomenides, especially the Plectambonitoidea, which radiated rapidly during this interval. The porambonitoids, on the other hand, were still in recovery following the early Darriwilian extinctions. Orthides remained dominant, particularly at high latitudes. Biodiversity epicentres were located on most of the larger palaeoplates, as well as within the Iapetus Ocean. Provincial patterns were disrupted during the Sandbian and early Katian with the migration of many elements of the benthos into deeper-water regimes, enjoying a more cosmopolitan distribution. Later Katian faunas exhibit a partition between carbonate and clastic environments. During the latest Katian, biogeographical patterns were disrupted by polewards migrations of warm-water taxa in response to the changing climate; possibly as a consequence of low-latitude cradles being developed in, for instance, carbonate reef settings. Many clades were well established with especially the strophomenides beginning to outnumber the previously successful orthides, although this process had already begun, regionally, in the mid to late Darriwilian. At the same time, atrypoid and pentameroid clades also began to radiate in low-latitude faunas, anticipating their dominance in Silurian faunas. The Hirnantian was marked by severe extinctions particularly across orthidestrophomenide clades within the context of few, but well-defined, climatically controlled provincial belts.

AB - The phylogeographical evolution and the consequent changing distribution and diversity of rhynchonelliform brachiopods through the Ordovician are linked to the dynamic palaeogeography of the period. The Early Ordovician (Tremadocian and Floian) is characterized by globally low-diversity faunas with local biodiversity epicentres, notably on the South China Palaeoplate; low-latitude porambonitoid-dominated faunas with early plectambonitoid and clitambonitoid representatives, as well as high-latitude assemblages mostly dominated by orthoids, can be recognized, but many taxa are rooted in Late Cambrian stocks. The Early Ordovician displays a steady increase in rhynchonelliformean biodiversity, which was mostly driven by the increasing success of the Porambonitoidea and Orthoidea, but the billingsellids and early plectambonitoids also contributed to this expansion. During the Early to Mid Ordovician (Dapingian-Darriwilian), marine life experienced an unprecedented hike in diversity at the species, genus and family levels that firmly installed the suspension-feeding benthos as the main component of the Palaeozoic fauna. However, this may have occurred in response to an early Darriwilian annihilation of existing clades, some of which had been most successful during the Early Ordovician. New clades rapidly expanded. The continents were widely dispersed together with a large number of microcontinents and volcanic arcs related to intense magmatic and tectonic activity. Climates were warm and sea-levels were high. Pivotal to the entire diversification is the role of gamma (inter-provincial) diversity and by implication the spread of the continents and frequency of island arcs and microcontinents. The phylogeographical analysis demonstrates that this new palaeogeographical configuration was particularly well explored and utilized by the strophomenides, especially the Plectambonitoidea, which radiated rapidly during this interval. The porambonitoids, on the other hand, were still in recovery following the early Darriwilian extinctions. Orthides remained dominant, particularly at high latitudes. Biodiversity epicentres were located on most of the larger palaeoplates, as well as within the Iapetus Ocean. Provincial patterns were disrupted during the Sandbian and early Katian with the migration of many elements of the benthos into deeper-water regimes, enjoying a more cosmopolitan distribution. Later Katian faunas exhibit a partition between carbonate and clastic environments. During the latest Katian, biogeographical patterns were disrupted by polewards migrations of warm-water taxa in response to the changing climate; possibly as a consequence of low-latitude cradles being developed in, for instance, carbonate reef settings. Many clades were well established with especially the strophomenides beginning to outnumber the previously successful orthides, although this process had already begun, regionally, in the mid to late Darriwilian. At the same time, atrypoid and pentameroid clades also began to radiate in low-latitude faunas, anticipating their dominance in Silurian faunas. The Hirnantian was marked by severe extinctions particularly across orthidestrophomenide clades within the context of few, but well-defined, climatically controlled provincial belts.

U2 - 10.1144/M38.11

DO - 10.1144/M38.11

M3 - Book chapter

AN - SCOPUS:84889663789

T3 - Geological Society of London. Memoirs

SP - 127

EP - 144

BT - Early palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography

A2 - Harper, D. A. T.

A2 - Servais, T.

PB - Geological Society

ER -

ID: 184319459