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Surviving mass extinction by bridging the benthic/planktic divide

Darling, Kate F.; Thomas, Ellen; Kasemann, Simone A.; Seears, Heidi A.; Smart, Christopher W.; Wade, Christopher M.

Authors

Kate F. Darling

Ellen Thomas

Simone A. Kasemann

Heidi A. Seears

Christopher W. Smart



Abstract

Evolution of planktic organisms from benthic ancestors is commonly thought to represent unidirectional expansion into new ecological domains, possibly only once per clade. For foraminifera, this evolutionary expansion occurred in the Early-Middle Jurassic, and all living and extinct planktic foraminifera have been placed within 1 clade, the Suborder Globigerinina. The subsequent radiation of planktic foraminifera in the Jurassic and Cretaceous resulted in highly diverse assemblages, which suffered mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous, leaving an impoverished assemblage dominated by microperforate triserial and biserial forms. The few survivor species radiated to form diverse assemblages once again in the Cenozoic. There have, however, long been doubts regarding the monophyletic origin of planktic foraminifera. We present surprising but conclusive genetic evidence that the Recent biserial planktic Streptochilus globigerus belongs to the same biological species as the benthic Bolivina variabilis, and geochemical evidence that this ecologically flexible species actively grows within the open-ocean surface waters, thus occupying both planktic and benthic domains. Such a lifestyle (tychopelagic) had not been recognized as adapted by foraminifera. Tychopelagic are endowed with great ecological advantage, enabling rapid recolonization of the extinction- susceptible pelagic domain from the benthos. We argue that the existence of such forms must be considered in resolving foraminiferal phylogeny.

Citation

Darling, K. F., Thomas, E., Kasemann, S. A., Seears, H. A., Smart, C. W., & Wade, C. M. (2009). Surviving mass extinction by bridging the benthic/planktic divide. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106(31), 12629-12633. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902827106

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Aug 4, 2009
Publication Date Aug 4, 2009
Deposit Date Aug 9, 2022
Print ISSN 0027-8424
Electronic ISSN 1091-6490
Publisher National Academy of Sciences
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 106
Issue 31
Pages 12629-12633
DOI https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902827106
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3189057
Publisher URL https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.0902827106