Spatial and Temporal Distribution of the Island-Dwelling Kogaionidae (Mammalia, Multituberculata) in the Uppermost Cretaceous of Transylvania (Western Romania)

IF 5.1 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History Pub Date : 2022-06-14 DOI:10.1206/0003-0090.456.1.1
Z. Csiki-Sava, M. Vremir, Jin Meng, Ș. Vasile, S. Brusatte, M. Norell
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The latest Cretaceous kogaionid multituberculates from Transylvania (western Romania) were part of an endemic European clade of mammals that underwent an insular radiation at the end of the Cretaceous and then survived the end-Cretaceous mass extinction that extinguished many groups of contemporary therians. Transylvanian kogaionids lived on what was an island during the latest Cretaceous—“Haţeg Island”—and their fossils are found in the uppermost Campanian to upper Maastrichtian deposits of the Haţeg, Rusca Montană, and southwestern Transylvanian basins. This fossil record has improved dramatically over the past several decades, in part resulting from our decade-long joint Romanian-American-Scottish fieldwork, and comprises one of the most impressive and complete archives of Mesozoic mammals, including not only jaws and teeth but several incomplete skulls and partial skeletons. We here review the fossil record of kogaionids from Transylvania. We report four new occurrences from the Haţeg Basin, update information on previously described ones, and use our database to reassess the chronostratigraphical and geographical distribution of kogaionids and their evolutionary patterns. Although it was previously suggested that large and small kogaionids had largely mutually exclusive spatial distributions, we recognize the cooccurrence of small and large taxa in various units, suggesting a sympatric distribution across their entire chronostratigraphic range. We also identify a novel pattern: small kogaionids appear somewhat earlier than their larger relatives in all well-sampled sedimentary successions, suggesting that kogaionid colonizations of Haţeg Island and component regions took place at small body size and that body size increased only later through local evolution. We find correlations between body size, preservation style, and sedimentary context, which give insight into kogaionid paleobiology and diversity. Larger kogaionids are represented more often by partial skulls and occasionally skeletons compared with small kogaionids, which are usually represented only by isolated teeth, regardless of provenance. Larger kogaionids currently have a higher recognized local taxic diversity than their smaller relatives. We hypothesize that this may be in part a consequence of preservational bias related to body size, as more complete specimens may be more easily diagnosed as distinct taxa than those that are represented by more fragmentary and/or incomplete fossils. If true, the taxic diversity of smaller kogaionids may currently be underestimated. Finally, we identify correspondence between sedimentary facies and preservation style. Red-colored fine-grained rocks, suggestive of well-drained, oxidized floodplain paleoenvironments, yield more complete specimens than drab, greenish or grayish sediments deposited in more poorly drained parts of the floodplain. This pattern may suggest habitat preferences for better-drained floodplain environments and a semifossorial lifestyle for some taxa. As the kogaionid fossil record improves, we can further test the hypotheses and patterns outlined above. The pace of new kogaionid discoveries by our team and others indicates that a more complete picture of kogaionid distribution, paleobiology, and evolution will emerge in the coming years, contributing to a more profound understanding of this peculiar group of island-dwelling Mesozoic mammals.
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特兰西瓦尼亚(罗马尼亚西部)上白垩世岛栖Kogaionidae(哺乳目,多结核目)的时空分布
来自特兰西瓦尼亚(罗马尼亚西部)的最新白垩纪多瘤科盖奥尼(kogaionid multituberculates)是一个特有的欧洲哺乳动物分支的一部分,该分支在白垩纪末期经历了岛屿辐射,然后在白垩纪末期的大灭绝中幸存下来,这场灭绝了许多当代兽类群体。特兰西瓦尼亚kogaionids生活在白垩纪晚期的一个岛屿上——“Haţeg岛”——它们的化石在Haţeg、Rusca montanian和特兰西瓦尼亚盆地西南部的坎帕尼亚至马斯特里克斯坦上部沉积物中被发现。在过去的几十年里,这个化石记录得到了极大的改进,部分原因是我们罗马尼亚-美国-苏格兰长达十年的联合田野调查,它包括了最令人印象深刻和完整的中生代哺乳动物档案之一,不仅包括颌骨和牙齿,还包括一些不完整的头骨和部分骨骼。我们在此回顾了来自特兰西瓦尼亚的kogaionids化石记录。我们报告了Haţeg盆地的4个新发现,更新了先前描述的信息,并使用我们的数据库重新评估了kogaionids的年代地层和地理分布及其演化模式。虽然以前认为大、小类群的空间分布基本上是相互排斥的,但我们发现不同单位的大、小类群同时存在,表明它们在整个年代地层范围内具有同域分布。我们还发现了一种新的模式:在所有取样良好的沉积序列中,小的kogaionid比它们的大近亲出现得更早,这表明Haţeg岛和组成区域的kogaionid的殖民发生在小的身体尺寸上,并且身体尺寸后来通过局部进化才增加。我们发现了身体大小、保存方式和沉积环境之间的相关性,这有助于深入了解科盖龙的古生物学和多样性。较大的kogaionids通常由部分头骨和偶尔的骨骼来代表,而较小的kogaionids通常只由孤立的牙齿来代表,而不管来源如何。目前,较大的kogaionids比其较小的亲缘种具有更高的公认的本地分类多样性。我们假设,这可能部分是由于与体型有关的保存偏见,因为更完整的标本可能比那些由更多碎片和/或不完整的化石代表的标本更容易被诊断为不同的分类群。如果这是真的,那么目前较小的kogaionids的分类多样性可能被低估了。最后,确定了沉积相与保存样式的对应关系。红色的细粒岩石表明排水良好的氧化洪泛区古环境,比在洪泛区排水较差的地区沉积的灰褐色、绿色或灰色沉积物产生的标本更完整。这种模式可能表明对排水良好的洪泛平原环境的栖息地偏好和某些分类群的半穴居生活方式。随着kogaionid化石记录的改进,我们可以进一步验证上述假设和模式。我们的团队和其他人的新发现表明,未来几年将出现更完整的kogaionid分布,古生物学和进化情况,有助于更深入地了解这一奇特的中生代岛屿哺乳动物群体。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
4
审稿时长
>18 weeks
期刊介绍: The Bulletin, published continuously since 1881, consists of longer monographic volumes in the field of natural sciences relating to zoology, paleontology, and geology. Current numbers are published at irregular intervals. The Bulletin was originally a place to publish short papers, while longer works appeared in the Memoirs. However, in the 1920s, the Memoirs ceased and the Bulletin series began publishing longer papers. A new series, the Novitates, published short papers describing new forms.
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