Appalachian State University
Browse

Calendar Scale, Environmental Variation Preserved In The Skeletal Phenotype Of A Fossil Bryozoan (Rhombopora Blakei N. SP.), From The Mississippian Of Ireland

Download (4.68 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-12-05, 16:29 authored by Steven J. Hageman, Patrick N. Wyse Jackson, Aaron R. Abernethy, Margret Steinthorsdottir
A single large colony (20 cm) of Rhombopora blakei n. sp. from the Hook Head Formation of Ireland (Tournaisian Stage, Mississippian) permits an analysis of within-colony variation associated with environmental change at a calendar scale (days to decades). Morphometric data for three external characters--apertures spacing along a branch and diagonal to a branch as well as lateral zooecial spacing--were collected as growth series (16-30 generations) from 13 segments within the colony. ANOVA, post-hoc means testing and graphical analysis of standardized data revealed nearest neighbor effects at the zooecial level and non-random distribution of variances across the colony. Parametric tests for sequential nonrandomness revealed cyclic variation through growth transects at three levels (23.3, 9.4 and 5.3 generations). Comparisons to growth rates of modern bryozoans suggests that the longer-term cycles are annual and that the shortest cycles may be related to lunar tidal cycles.The exceptional size and preservation of this single specimen, which is a new species of rhabdomesine Bryozoa, reinforces the importance of collecting individual morphological measurements from randomly selected and widely spaced parts of a colony for taxonomic, evolutionary and ecological applications.

History

AI-Assisted

  • No

Year Created

2011

College or School

  • College of Arts and Sciences

Department

Geology

Language

English

Access Rights

  • Open

Content Genre or Classification

Journal article

Usage metrics

    Research, Scholarly, & Creative Outputs

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC