• Title of article

    Paleoecology of the earliest skeletal metazoan communities: Implications for early biomineralization

  • Author/Authors

    Wood، نويسنده , , Rachel A.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    184
  • To page
    190
  • Abstract
    The oldest skeletal metazoans (~ 550–543 Ma) are probably of diploblast grade, i.e., stem- or crown-group cnidarians or basal stem-group bilaterians, sessile benthos, and found in shallow marine carbonate settings. The abundant ions in carbonate environments made the formation of carbonate exoskeletons within pre-existing organic matrices physiologically inexpensive. Individuals also reached the largest sizes within reefs, further suggesting that growth in settings conducive to rapid carbonate precipitation promoted skeletonization. Likewise, the preferential precipitation of aragonite and high-Mg calcite mineralogies was thermodynamically-favored by ambient seawater Mg:Ca ratios/pCO2. Finally, the sessile habit of the earliest skeletal metazoans may be due to the fact that it is energetically far less costly to mineralise immobile rather than mobile organisms. rphological and paleoecological characteristics of this biota — occupation of progressively younger skeletal parts (Cloudina and Sinotubulites), aggregating behavior and possession of a stalk or holdfast (Namacalathus), and the ability to encrust, a modular habit, and large size (Namapoikia) — as well as general attachment to thrombolitic substrates, are all consistent with competitive strategies and anti-predation traits. Together, these observations support the view that skeletonization was promoted by the rise of substrate competitors and bilaterian predators, in predominately carbonate platform and reef environments.
  • Keywords
    Ediacaran , Cambrian , Reefs , biomineralization , predation , Competition
  • Journal title
    EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
  • Record number

    2334450