Giuseppe Aiello , Roberta Parisi , Ilaria Mazzini , Diana Barra
{"title":"让死者工作:评估海洋 Ostracoda 死亡集合体自生性的新方法","authors":"Giuseppe Aiello , Roberta Parisi , Ilaria Mazzini , Diana Barra","doi":"10.1016/j.revmic.2023.100755","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Sedimentary and paleontological records can be powerful means of reconstructing ecological and physical environmental changes, by using a variety of records extending proxies to extend chronologies beyond the reach of instrumental or manual records. Ostracods are often used as paleoenvironmental proxies. Estimating the population age structure could be a useful tool for assessing the influence of some environmental parameters on death assemblages and for determining the autochthoneity or allochthoneity of the species that make up the thanatocoenosis. In the literature, several methods based on population age structure have been proposed to distinguish autochthonous and allochthonous components of life/death ostracod assemblages.</p><p>The Adult:Juveniles ratio analysis of a rich and well-preserved ostracod assemblage from one site in the circalittoral zone of Pontine Archipelago, in the central-eastern Tyrrhenian Sea, is presented. The new Specific Population Stage Index (SPS) is proposed, built upon the measurements of all growth stages in the assemblage. The population structure using the new SPS Index on three different grain sizes is tested against a list of putative <em>in situ</em> and transported ostracod specimens. The analysis on the small grain size (maximum heigth >63 µm) proved the most effective in describing the putative life ostracod assemblage, whereas in the largest grain size (maximum height >180 µm) the young instars of the smaller species are under-represented. This includes species generally under-represented in the fossil record of the Mediterranean, probably due to sample processing bias and not to the rarity of the species itself. Assessing the autochthoneity of modern/fossil assemblages has great potential for acquiring baseline information on ecosystems before the onset of human activities, making this an extremely powerful approach essential to evaluating anthropogenic impacts. This approach seeks to identify the <em>in situ</em> life assemblages within an ostracod population to ensure that paleoenvironmental interpretations are not biased by transported allochthonous elements.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":45442,"journal":{"name":"REVUE DE MICROPALEONTOLOGIE","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0035159823000442/pdfft?md5=9e7ff92fef2fb7b5c2c3dcde7bf61179&pid=1-s2.0-S0035159823000442-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Putting the dead to work: A new method to assess the autochthony of marine Ostracoda death assemblages\",\"authors\":\"Giuseppe Aiello , Roberta Parisi , Ilaria Mazzini , Diana Barra\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.revmic.2023.100755\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>Sedimentary and paleontological records can be powerful means of reconstructing ecological and physical environmental changes, by using a variety of records extending proxies to extend chronologies beyond the reach of instrumental or manual records. Ostracods are often used as paleoenvironmental proxies. Estimating the population age structure could be a useful tool for assessing the influence of some environmental parameters on death assemblages and for determining the autochthoneity or allochthoneity of the species that make up the thanatocoenosis. In the literature, several methods based on population age structure have been proposed to distinguish autochthonous and allochthonous components of life/death ostracod assemblages.</p><p>The Adult:Juveniles ratio analysis of a rich and well-preserved ostracod assemblage from one site in the circalittoral zone of Pontine Archipelago, in the central-eastern Tyrrhenian Sea, is presented. The new Specific Population Stage Index (SPS) is proposed, built upon the measurements of all growth stages in the assemblage. The population structure using the new SPS Index on three different grain sizes is tested against a list of putative <em>in situ</em> and transported ostracod specimens. The analysis on the small grain size (maximum heigth >63 µm) proved the most effective in describing the putative life ostracod assemblage, whereas in the largest grain size (maximum height >180 µm) the young instars of the smaller species are under-represented. This includes species generally under-represented in the fossil record of the Mediterranean, probably due to sample processing bias and not to the rarity of the species itself. Assessing the autochthoneity of modern/fossil assemblages has great potential for acquiring baseline information on ecosystems before the onset of human activities, making this an extremely powerful approach essential to evaluating anthropogenic impacts. 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Putting the dead to work: A new method to assess the autochthony of marine Ostracoda death assemblages
Sedimentary and paleontological records can be powerful means of reconstructing ecological and physical environmental changes, by using a variety of records extending proxies to extend chronologies beyond the reach of instrumental or manual records. Ostracods are often used as paleoenvironmental proxies. Estimating the population age structure could be a useful tool for assessing the influence of some environmental parameters on death assemblages and for determining the autochthoneity or allochthoneity of the species that make up the thanatocoenosis. In the literature, several methods based on population age structure have been proposed to distinguish autochthonous and allochthonous components of life/death ostracod assemblages.
The Adult:Juveniles ratio analysis of a rich and well-preserved ostracod assemblage from one site in the circalittoral zone of Pontine Archipelago, in the central-eastern Tyrrhenian Sea, is presented. The new Specific Population Stage Index (SPS) is proposed, built upon the measurements of all growth stages in the assemblage. The population structure using the new SPS Index on three different grain sizes is tested against a list of putative in situ and transported ostracod specimens. The analysis on the small grain size (maximum heigth >63 µm) proved the most effective in describing the putative life ostracod assemblage, whereas in the largest grain size (maximum height >180 µm) the young instars of the smaller species are under-represented. This includes species generally under-represented in the fossil record of the Mediterranean, probably due to sample processing bias and not to the rarity of the species itself. Assessing the autochthoneity of modern/fossil assemblages has great potential for acquiring baseline information on ecosystems before the onset of human activities, making this an extremely powerful approach essential to evaluating anthropogenic impacts. This approach seeks to identify the in situ life assemblages within an ostracod population to ensure that paleoenvironmental interpretations are not biased by transported allochthonous elements.
期刊介绍:
La Revue de micropaléontologie publie 4 fois par an des articles de intérêt international, consacrés à tous les aspects de la micropaléontologie. Les textes, en anglais ou en français, sont des articles originaux, des résultats de recherche, des synthèses et mises au point, des comptes rendus de réunions scientifiques et des analyses de ouvrages. La revue se veut résolument ouverte à tous les aspects de la micropaléontologie en accueillant des travaux traitant de la systématique des microfossiles (et de leurs équivalents actuels), des bactéries aux microrestes de vertébrés, et de toutes leurs applications en sciences biologiques et géologiques.