4.4 Article

Ediacaran distributions in space and time: testing assemblage concepts of earliest macroscopic body fossils

Journal

PALEOBIOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 574-594

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/pab.2016.20

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Toronto
  2. Mary H. Beatty Fellowship
  3. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada-Canada Graduate Scholarship-Master's
  4. Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
  5. Connaught Foundation
  6. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  7. National Geographic Society

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The mid-late Ediacaran Period (similar to 579-541 Ma) is characterized by globally distributed marine soft-bodied organisms of unclear phylogenetic affinities colloquially called the Ediacara biota. Despite an absence of systematic agreement, previous workers have tested for underlying factors that may control the occurrence of Ediacaran macrofossils in space and time. Three taxonomically distinct assemblages, termed the Avalon, White Sea, and Nama, were identified and informally incorporated into Ediacaran biostratigraphy. After similar to 15 years of new fossil discoveries and taxonomic revision, we retest the validity of these assemblages using a comprehensive database of Ediacaran macrofossil occurrences. Using multivariate analysis, we also test the degree to which taphonomy, time, and paleoenvironment explain the taxonomic composition of these assemblages. We find that: (1) the three assemblages remain distinct taxonomic groupings; (2) there is little support for a large-scale litho-taphonomic bias present in the Ediacaran; and (3) there is significant chronostratigraphic overlap between the taxonomically and geographically distinct Avalonian and White Sea assemblages ca. 560-557 Ma. Furthermore, both assemblages show narrow bathymetric ranges, reinforcing that they were paleoenvironmental-ecological biotopes and spatially restricted in marine settings. Meanwhile, the Nama assemblage appears to be a unique faunal stage, defined by a global loss of diversity, coincident with a noted expansion of bathymetrically unrestricted, long-ranging Ediacara taxa. These data reinforce that Ediacaran biodiversity and stratigraphic ranges of its representative taxa must first statistically account for varying likelihood of preservation at a local scale to ultimately aggregate the Ediacaran macrofossil record into a global biostratigraphic context.

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