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Bryozoan provinces and patterns of generic evolution and extinction in the Late Ordovician of North America

 

作者: ROBERT L. ANSTEY,  

 

期刊: Lethaia  (WILEY Available online 1986)
卷期: Volume 19, issue 1  

页码: 33-51

 

ISSN:0024-1164

 

年代: 1986

 

DOI:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1986.tb01898.x

 

出版商: Blackwell Publishing Ltd

 

关键词: Bryozoa;provinces;biomes;Ordovician;North America;endemism;tiering;complexity;survivorship;eurytopy;succession;diversity;extinction

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

The Late Ordovician bryozoan genera of central and southeastern North America are geographically distributed in three biotic provinces, separated by boundaries reflecting major lithofacies differences. The central Cincinnati Province contains most of the North American endemic genera, and represents a narrow ecological zone separating the clastic wedges of the marginal Reedsville‐Lorraine Province from the cratonic carbonate platform of the Red River‐Stony Mountain Province. The provinces provided major life zones, or biomes, for each of the five bryozoan orders. Genera comprising the provinces differed as well in morphologic complexity, geochronologic survivorship, tiering, endemism and eurytopy. Regions on either side of the Cincinnati Province were dominated by inferred immigrants from Baltoscandia. Al‐logenic provincial succession produced time‐averaged mixed faunas in regions near the provincial boundaries. Although most generic originations took place within the Cincinnati Province, evolutionary novelties are associated with the Reedsville‐Lorraine Province. The loss of the diverse Cincinnati Province, connected with global cooling and a eustatic lowering of sea level, may have been a chief factor in the Late Ordovician extinction of bryozoan genera. Genera from the Red River‐Stony Mountain Province differentially survived into t

 

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