the life and times of the earliest horseshoe crabs david rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no...

27
Peter Van Roy The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs Dave Rudkin Department of Natural History (Palaeobiology) Royal Ontario Museum Toronto, Canada

Upload: others

Post on 28-Jul-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Peter Van Roy

The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs

Dave RudkinDepartment of Natural History (Palaeobiology)

Royal Ontario MuseumToronto, Canada

Page 2: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs• Geological Time: the Ordovician Period in context

• The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: “GOBE”

• The Ordovician World: Geography, Climate & Life

• The Earliest Horseshoe Crabs

• End-Ordovician Mass Extinctions

• Post-Ordovician Record

Page 3: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Geological Time – 4.6 Billion Years of Earth History

65 million years 291 million years186 million years 4 BILLION years!

Page 4: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/2008/58/geotimespiral_text.pdf

Page 5: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Setting the Stage - The Cambrian Explosion• advent of widespread biomineralization - establishment of eumetazoan body plans - marine substrate “revolution” - ecological “escalation” - by close of Cambrian Period (~488 MYA) all

major animal phyla were present in the seas of the Earth

542 MYA

488 MYA

(after Xiao & Laflamme, Peterson et al & Dunn et al.)

Page 6: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event

GOBE marks abrupt rise of both “Paleozoic” & “Modern” Evolutionary Faunas - mostly at lower taxonomic levels & in “shelly” biotas

“The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event” (GOBE) was

arguably the most important and sustained increase of

marine biodiversity in Earth’s history.”

[Servais, et al., 2009 GSA Today, v. 19, no. 4/5]

ORDOVICIANORDOVICIAN

[Webby 2003]

488.3

443.7

460.9

471.8

455.8

Page 7: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

488 MYA

443 MYA

251 MYA

0

The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event• fossil record of family-level diversity through the Phanerozoic

[Servais, et al., 2009]

25 MY

Page 8: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event• a Cambrian hold-over & important new elements of the Paleozoic Fauna

Page 9: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Ordovician World• a dynamic global paleogeographic picture for the GOBE

600 MYA Ediacaran 560 MYA

Late Cambrian - 500 MYAEarly Cambrian - 540 MYA Late Ordovician - 450 MYA• rapid seafloor spreading - maximum dispersal of continental land masses, island arcs & rifted “terranes” - exceptionally high sea levels - maximum extent of tropical shelf areas

[http://cpgeosystems.com/mollglobe.html - Ron Blakey, Colorado Plateau Geosystems, Inc.]

Page 10: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Ordovician World•global environmental context for the GOBE

[Vandenbroucke, et al. 2010]

• “greenhouse” climate for much of the Early & Middle Ordovician & a terminal ice age!

[Trotter, et al. 2008]

Page 11: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Ordovician World• global environmental context continued …

• global mean surface temperature approximately 2oC higher than present day, with equatorial Sea Surface Temperatures as high as 40oC

• mean atmospheric CO2 content approximately 15 times higher than PAL (Pre-industrial Atmospheric Level)

• mean atmospheric O2 volume approximately 68% of modern value

• global sea levels up to 220 metres higher than today – possibly the highest of the entire Phanerozoic!

• prolific volcanic activity related to rapid sea-floor spreading, break-up of Rodinia,maximal dispersal of tectonic plates … increased erosion & inorganic nutrient influx

• lower (2.7% average) solar luminosity, shorter days (~21 hours = 417 days/year due to faster rotation), closer Moon (approx. 160,000 km) & stronger tides

• possible correlation (470 MYA) with major asteroid break-up event (L-chondriteparent body) & high influx of meteorites (incl. km-size impacters)

Page 12: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Ordovician Life• extraordinary diversity in the seas – no comparable macroeukaryotic life on land!

Reconstruction image courtesy of The Manitoba Museum

Page 13: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Liopleurodon93 at en.wikipedia Apokryltaros at en.wikipedia© 1997 Philippe Janvier

• more appropriately … a sea without gnathostome (jaw-bearing vertebrate) predators

• conodonts & agnathan(“jawless”) craniate “fishes”

… small size & mostlymicrophagous

G. Nowlan

M. Purnell

Ordovician Life

Page 14: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Ordovician Life – the oldest horseshoe crab fossils

20072008

Lunataspis aurora

Page 15: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

488.3

443.7

460.9

471.8

455.8

Ordovician Life – the oldest horseshoe crab fossils

*

Lunataspis aurora

Page 16: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Ordovician Life – fossils found with Lunataspis

0.5 mm

10 mm

10 mm

10 mm

•shallow, near-shore, restricted

marine setting

•eurypterids•medusans•chlorophytes•polychaetes•pycnogonids….. + + + + !

Page 17: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Ordovician Life – new Lunataspis material

10 mm

NEW juvenile specimensreveal proportional growth

changes

Page 18: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Ordovician Life – the NEWEST oldest horseshoe crab fossils!

Van Roy, et al. 2008

P. Van Roy

2010

Page 19: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

488.3

443.7

460.9

471.8

455.8

Ordovician Life – the NEWEST oldest horseshoe crab fossils!

Van Roy & Briggs 2011

Courtesy P. Van Roy

* 10 mm

Page 20: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Ordovician Life – other Fezouata fossils

•anomalocaridids•trilobites •chlorophytes•polychaetes•diverse echinoderms•graptolites….. + + + + !

•deep, open water, fully marine, low-energy

setting

All images courtesy P. Van Roy

Model of Laggania by E. Horn

Page 21: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Early horseshoe crab fossils – the changing picture

?

• re-interpreting the telson of Lunataspis

Page 22: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Terminal Ordovician Extinctions• global cooling, southern glaciation, sea-level drop & loss of tropical shelf habitat

[Trotter, et al. 2008]http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Phanerozoic_Climate_Change.png

Page 23: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

488 MYA

443 MYA

251 MYA

0

Terminal Ordovician Extinctions• second-most severe of the “Big 5” Phanerozoic Mass Extinctions

[Servais, et al., 2009]

Page 24: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

MAJOR CASUALTIES IN MARINE ECOSYSTEMS …

Terminal Ordovician Extinctions• second-most severe of the “Big 5” Phanerozoic Mass Extinctions

BUT HORSESHOE CRABS SURVIVED!

Page 25: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

The Post-Ordovician Record

NO Silurian-Devonian horseshoe crabs … so far!

Earliest fossil record in Ordovician

? Probable, but as yet undetected, Cambrian origin

Reappearance & peak diversity

Survival & recovery

Modest late Mesozoic presence

Very poor Tertiary record

4 extant species … but for how much longer?

Page 26: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

Summary• the horseshoe crab fossil record is now traceable back to the Early Ordovician, but may eventually be extended into the Cambrian Period

• the earliest known horseshoe crabs were established in open marine habitats during the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event

• environmental parameters during the GOBE were VERY different from those prevailing today …

much higher atmospheric CO2 & lower O2extreme global “greenhouse” conditionsexceptionally high sea levelsno complex land life no vertebrate predatorschanging planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilizationmeteor bombardmentrapid plate movements, volcanism & mantle plumes

• horseshoe crab fortunes subsequently waxed & waned, but they have emerged as survivors of 5 major mass extinction events

• can they continue to adapt to rapid global change?

Page 27: The Life and Times of the Earliest Horseshoe Crabs David Rudkin.pdf · no complex land life . no vertebrate predators. changing planktic trophic systems & benthic substrate utilization

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSRESEARCH FUNDING: The Royal Ontario Museum

The Manitoba Museum Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada

IN-KIND ASSISTANCE:Churchill Northern Studies Centre

FEZOUATA BIOTA IMAGES:Peter Van Roy

CO-AUTHORS / CO-RESEARCHERS:Graham Young, Michael Cuggy, Deborah Thompson, Ed Dobrzanski,

Sean Robson, Godfrey Nowlan

WORKSHOP ATTENDANCE: Cathay-Pacific Airways, Dr. Paul Shin & the

Workshop Planning Committee