Transcript EPSCSept30a

The Early Paleozoic Fauna:
Ordovician radiation of the
Cambrian survivors
EPSC233 Earth & Life History (Fall 2002)
Recommended reading:
STANLEY “Earth System History”
Chapter 13, pp. 348-355.
Keywords: phyla (arthropods, poriferans,
brachiopods, echinoderms, mollusks,
hemichordates), reef builders
(archeocyathids), deposit feeders
(trilobites, mollusks), filter feeders
(eocrinoids, crinoids, brachiopods,
mollusks), predators (cephalopods).
Apart from the occasional footprint,
there is no evidence of terrestrial
animal life in Cambrian and Ordovician
sedimentary rocks.
Oxygen levels had probably reached
values close to the present
atmospheric level.
Throughout the Paleozoic era, the
rocks containing the most diverse
fossils are typically ancient shallowwater marine limestones, and
particularly fossilized reefs.
Reef: CaCO3framework of biogenic origin
that rose over the sea floor. This framework
is solid from the start and is not compacted
or crushed during burial.
The earliest reef builders in shallow
Paleozoic seas were not corals...
Other organisms have the ability to build
housings of CaCO3 and thrive in shallow
water.
Stromatolitic reefs of the Precambrian
were replaced by algal reefs (like those
next to the Burgess Shale) and by new
types of animals... the archeocyathids.
Archeocyathids
were simple,
filter-feeding,
sponge-like
animals (phylum
Porifera). Their
calcified skeletons
built the earliest
metazoan (i.e.
animal) reefs.
Calcified corals
had not evolved
yet.
These simple
animals
diversified and
spread rapidly:
over 200 genera
are known
worldwide from
the middle
Cambrian. But
they went extinct
before the end
of the Cambrian
period.
Poriferans (sponges) and cnidarians
(jellyfish, sea pens and corals), the
simplest type of animals found today,
were probably among the earliest to
appear.
Several Ediacaran fossils are interpreted
as poriferans or cnidarians because of
their radial symmetry.
Sponges (poriferans) had been
around since the latest
Precambrian.
Most of them leave little
trace in the fossil record. In
some cases, their soft body is
supported by a flimsy skeleton
of mm-size spicules which falls
apart upon death.
Usually, scattered spicules
are the only remains found.
An early Cambrian reef was a busy place…
good for shelter and to ambush prey.
During the Ordovician period new
animals will evolve to build reefs.
Cnidarians (sea anemones, jellyfish) give
rise to calcified corals.
Poriferans give rise to stromatoporoids.
A type of filter-feeding worm gives rise
to a new phylum, the bryozoans.
Primitive corals first appear in the
Ordovician. Some were solitary, horn
shape (rugose corals). Their growth
bands have been used to calculate the
number of days in Paleozoic years.
Other corals are colonial, like this
tabulate coral Favosites.
stromatoporoids: sponge-related (not corals)
Shapes like
stromatolites, but
the framework
clearly includes
mineralized pillars
and layers that
used to support a
filter-feeding
organism.
Life in sediments
- advantage: offers shelter
- disadvantage:
- access to oxygen?
- how not to choke in mud
- Life on sediment:
- but how not to sink in...
Brachiopods (a phylum of shelly
invertebrates) will become the most
abundant shelly fauna of the Paleozoic era.
Most shells on today’s beaches are bivalve
mollusks (clams, oysters, mussels).
Until the end of the Paleozoic, brachiopods
were the most successful group in the
niche occupied today by mollusks.
Mollusks and brachiopods belong to
two different phyla.
They show similar use of hard parts
even though they are different types
of invertebrate animals.
Their shells are
-“anchors” for muscles
- offer protection from predators
- help keep out sediment from
breathing and feeding organs.
Brachiopods are adapted to life on top of
the sediment. Many have a pedicle
(brown) to anchor themselves to a solid
object (reef, or other shells or rock).