4.2 Article

Late Cretaceous hydrothermal vent communities from the Troodos ophiolite, Cyprus: systematics and evolutionary significance

Journal

PAPERS IN PALAEONTOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 1927-1947

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/spp2.1370

Keywords

Upper Cretaceous; hydrothermal vent communities; Provannidae; Hokkaidoconchidae; Paskentanidae; Gaudryceratidae

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Modern hydrothermal vent communities are supported by microbial primary producers, with many dominant taxa emerging during the Cenozoic and Cretaceous periods. Fossil records of vent communities from these time periods are scarce. A discovery of Cretaceous vent communities in Cyprus reveals a diversity of new species in gastropods, with shared tube worms among vent sites in the western Neotethyan Ocean.
Modern hydrothermal vent communities are based on chemosynthesis by microbial primary producers. Molecular phylogenetic divergence estimates indicate that many of the dominant vent taxa arose during the Cenozoic and Cretaceous; however, the fossil record of vent communities from these time periods is poor. One occurrence of such Cretaceous vent communities pertains to six volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits in the Troodos ophiolite of Cyprus. These deposits represent hydrothermal activity on deep (2500-5000 m) arc-related spreading ridge(s) in the Neotethyan Ocean over several million years during the late Cenomanian and earliest Turonian. The Cyprus vent communities consist of worm tubes, representing possible vestimentiferans and serpulids, together with a moderate diversity of abyssochrysoid gastropods, belonging to eight new species (Desbruyeresia kinousaensis sp. nov., Desbruyeresia memiensis sp. nov., Desbruyeresia kambiaensis sp. nov., Hokkaidoconcha morisseaui sp. nov., Ascheria canni sp. nov., Cyprioconcha robertsoni gen. et sp. nov., Paskentana xenophontosi sp. nov. and Paskentana dixoni sp. nov.) in five genera and three families; none of the species is shared between vent sites. A single gaudryceratid ammonite from one of the vent sites most likely represents a water-logged shell that sank from surface waters. The gastropod fauna contains the first representatives of the genera Desbruyeresia, Hokkaidoconcha, Ascheria and Paskentana from hydrothermal vents, and also the youngest representative of the last-named genus in any environment. The Cypriot vent communities share tube worms with slightly older (Cenomanian) and younger (Turonian-Santonian) vent communities elsewhere in the western part of the Neotethyan Ocean.

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