BONE MODIFICATION FEATURES RESULTING FROM BARNACLE ATTACHMENT ON THE BONES OF LOGGERHEAD SEA TURTLES (Caretta caretta), CUMBERLAND ISLAND, GEORGIA, USA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PALEOECOLOGICAL, AND TAPHONOMIC ANALYSES OF FOSSIL SEA TURTLES

IF 1.5 4区 地球科学 Q2 GEOLOGY Palaios Pub Date : 2022-11-21 DOI:10.2110/palo.2022.021
J. Zonneveld, Z.E.E. Zonneveld, W. Bartels, M. Gingras, J. Head
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract: Sea turtles are characterized by a wide variety of invertebrate ectoparasites. Few of these ectoparasites leave a permanent indication of their presence on the skeletal remains of their host taxa and thus represent ecological information doomed to be lost in the paleontological record. Some barnacle taxa provide an exception to this, in that they cause the formation of small, subcircular to circular divots, pits, and holes on the skull, mandible, carapace or plastron of sea turtles. Loggerhead Sea Turtle (Caretta caretta) skeletons from Cumberland Island, Georgia, USA were examined to assess the presence, frequency, and loci of occurrence of barnacle pits, and to establish which taxa are involved in pit development. Six types of divot and pit attributed to barnacles are identified in this study. Type I traces are shallow, oval/semicircular in outline, with smooth, gently sloped bases. Type II traces are deep, hemispherical pits with smooth bases. Type III traces are deep, circular to subcircular pits with flat bases. Type IV traces are deep, circular to subcircular pits with multiple (4–6) small sub-pits on their bases. Type V traces are cylindrical, penetrative holes. Type VI traces comprise shallow ring-shaped grooves on the surface of the bone. Type I through III traces are identical to the ichnotaxon Karethraichnus lakkos. Type IV traces have not, as yet, been described in the rock record. Type V traces are identical to K. fiale. Type VI traces are identical to Thatchtelithichnus holmani. Barnacle taxa identified as emplacing non-penetrative divots and pits on C. caretta skulls, mandibles, and shell bones include Chelonibia caretta (Type I), Platylepas hexastylos (Types I–IV), Calyptolepas bjorndalae (Types I and II), and Stomatolepas elegans (Types I and II). Type V traces were most likely emplaced by either Stephanolepas muricata or Chelolepas cheloniae. Type VI traces reflect the former attachment of balanid or lepadid barnacles. Embedded barnacles were observed in epidermal material associated with Types I through IV traces but not for Type V and VI traces and thus the relationship is inferred for these latter traces. Barnacle-related pits, divots, and holes are believed to result from barnacle mediated chemical corrosion into the outer surface of sea turtle bone. The occurrence of these traces provides one of the few preservable lines of evidence of barnacle interactions with sea turtle hosts. Identification of definitive barnacle borings in fossil material will provide evidence of the evolution of platylepadid barnacles and the development of their commensal relationship with chelonid turtles.
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美国乔治亚州坎伯兰岛红海龟骨上附着的藤壶所引起的骨修饰特征:海龟化石的古生态学和地学分析的意义
摘要:海龟的特征是有各种各样的无脊椎动物外寄生虫。这些外寄生虫很少在宿主分类群的骨骼遗骸上留下它们存在的永久迹象,因此代表了注定要在古生物学记录中丢失的生态信息。一些藤壶类群提供了一个例外,因为它们会在海龟的头骨、下颌骨、甲壳或质体上形成小的、亚圆形到圆形的草皮、凹坑和洞。对来自美国乔治亚州坎伯兰岛的Loggerhead海龟(Caretta careta)骨骼进行了检查,以评估藤壶坑的存在、频率和发生地点,并确定哪些分类群参与了坑的发育。本研究确定了藤壶引起的六种类型的草皮和凹坑。I型痕迹较浅,轮廓为椭圆形/半圆形,底部平滑、平缓倾斜。II型痕迹是深的半球形凹坑,底部光滑。III型痕迹为深圆形至亚圆形凹坑,底部平坦。IV型痕迹为深圆形至亚圆形凹坑,底部有多个(4-6)小子凹坑。V型迹线是圆柱形穿透孔。VI型迹线包括骨表面上的浅环形凹槽。I型至III型痕迹与伊赫诺特松-卡雷奇努斯-拉克科斯相同。到目前为止,岩石记录中还没有描述IV型痕迹。V型迹线与K.fiale相同。VI型痕迹与Thatchtelithchnus holmani相同。被确定为在C.careta头骨、下颌骨和壳骨上安置非穿透性凹陷和凹坑的藤壶分类群包括Chelonibia careta(I型)、Platylepas hexastylos(I-IV型)、Calyptolepas bjondalae(I和II型)和Stomatolepas elegans(I和Ⅱ型)。V型痕迹最有可能是由Stephanolepas muricata或Chelolepas cheloniae布设的。VI型痕迹反映了龟头或鳞翅藤壶以前的附着。在与I型至IV型痕迹相关的表皮物质中观察到嵌入藤壶,但在V型和VI型痕迹中没有观察到,因此推断出后一种痕迹的关系。藤壶相关的凹坑、草皮和洞被认为是藤壶介导的海龟骨外表面化学腐蚀的结果。这些痕迹的出现提供了藤壶与海龟宿主相互作用的少数可保存证据之一。化石材料中确定藤壶钻孔将为扁口藤壶的进化及其与螯龟共生关系的发展提供证据。
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来源期刊
Palaios
Palaios 地学-地质学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
40
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: PALAIOS is a monthly journal, founded in 1986, dedicated to emphasizing the impact of life on Earth''s history as recorded in the paleontological and sedimentological records. PALAIOS disseminates information to an international spectrum of geologists and biologists interested in a broad range of topics, including, but not limited to, biogeochemistry, ichnology, paleoclimatology, paleoecology, paleoceanography, sedimentology, stratigraphy, geomicrobiology, paleobiogeochemistry, and astrobiology. PALAIOS publishes original papers that emphasize using paleontology to answer important geological and biological questions that further our understanding of Earth history. Accordingly, manuscripts whose subject matter and conclusions have broader geologic implications are much more likely to be selected for publication. Given that the purpose of PALAIOS is to generate enthusiasm for paleontology among a broad spectrum of readers, the editors request the following: titles that generate immediate interest; abstracts that emphasize important conclusions; illustrations of professional caliber used in place of words; and lively, yet scholarly, text.
期刊最新文献
NEW QUANTITATIVE DESCRIPTORS (SHAPE AND MACROBORING) OF BIOGENIC NODULES: EXAMPLES FROM THE LESSER ANTILLES AND NEW ZEALAND LOCOMOTION TRACES EMPLACED BY MODERN STALKLESS COMATULID CRINOIDS (FEATHERSTARS) A FOSSIL FOREST FROM ITALY REVEALS THAT WETLAND CONIFERS THRIVED IN EARLY PERMIAN PERI-TETHYAN PANGEA TAPHONOMY OF TINY TETRAPOD TRACKS IN AN EXAMPLE FROM THE LOWER PERMIAN (CISURALIAN) SŁUPIEC FORMATION (SW POLAND) PLANT COMMUNITY CHANGE ACROSS THE PALEOCENE–EOCENE BOUNDARY IN THE GULF COASTAL PLAIN, CENTRAL TEXAS
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