Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T20:21:24.978Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Multiple paleoecological controls on the composition of marine fossil assemblages from the Frasnian (Late Devonian) of Virginia, with a comparison of ordination methods

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2016

Andrew M. Bush
Affiliation:
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Center for Integrative Geosciences, University of Connecticut, 75 North Eagleville Road, Unit 3043, Storrs, Connecticut 06269. E-mail: andrew.bush@uconn.edu
Roderic I. Brame
Affiliation:
Division of Education, University of South Florida Polytechnic, 3433 Winter Lake Road, Lakeland, Florida 33803. E-mail: rbrame@poly.usf.edu

Abstract

Ecological ordination can reveal gradients in the species composition of fossil assemblages that can be correlated with paleoenvironmental gradients. Ordinations of simulated data sets suggest that nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) generally produces less distorted results than detrended correspondence analysis (DCA). We ordinated 113 brachiopod-dominated samples from the Frasnian (Late Devonian) Brallier, Scherr, and lower Foreknobs Formations of southwest Virginia, which represent a range of siliciclastic marine paleoenvironments. A clear environmental signal in the ordination results was obscured by (apparently) opportunistic species that occurred at high abundance in multiple environments; samples dominated by these species aggregated in ordination space regardless of paleoenvironmental provenance. After the opportunist-dominated samples were removed, NMDS revealed a gradient in species composition that was highly correlated with substrate (grain size); a second, orthogonal gradient likely reflects variation in disturbance intensity or frequency within grain-size regimes. Additional environmental or ecological factors, such as oxygenation, may also be related to the gradients. These two gradients, plus the environmental factors that controlled the occurrence of opportunistic species, explain much of the variation in assemblage composition in the fauna. In general, the composition of fossil assemblages is probably influenced by multiple paleoecological and paleoenvironmental factors, but many of these can be decomposed and analyzed.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Literature Cited

Alexander, R. 1977. Growth, morphology and ecology of Paleozoic and Mesozoic opportunistic species of brachiopods from Idaho-Utah. Journal of Paleontology 51:11331149.Google Scholar
Aseltine-Neilson, D. A., Bernstein, B. B., Palmer-Zwahlen, M. L., Riege, L. E., and Smith, R. W. 1999. Comparisons of turf communities from Pendleton Artificial Reef, Torrey Pines Artificial Reef, and a natural reef using multivariate techniques. Bulletin of Marine Science 65:3757.Google Scholar
Austin, M. P., and Noy-Meir, I. 1971. The problem of nonlinearity in ordination: experiments with two-gradient models. Journal of Ecology 59:763773.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bambach, R. K., and Bennington, J B. 1996. Do communities evolve? A major question in evolutionary paleoecology. Pp. 123160 in Jablonski, D., Erwin, D. H., and Lipps, J., eds. Evolutionary paleobiology: essays in honor of James W. Valentine. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Bassett, M. G. 1984. Life strategies of Silurian brachiopods. Special Papers in Palaeontology 32:237263.Google Scholar
Bennington, J B., and Bambach, R. K. 1996. Statistical testing for paleocommunity recurrence: are similar fossil assemblages ever the same? Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 127:107133.Google Scholar
Bergen, M., Weisberg, S. B., Smith, R. W., Cadien, D. B., Dalkey, A., Montagne, D. E., Stull, J. K., Velarde, R. G., and Ranasinghe, J. A. 2001. Relationship between depth, sediment, latitude, and the structure of benthic infaunal assemblages on the mainland shelf of southern California. Marine Biology 138:637647.Google Scholar
Bizzarro, M. 1995. The Middle Devonian chonetoidean brachiopods from the Hamilton Group of New York. Documents des Laboratoires de Géologie de Lyon 136:149189.Google Scholar
Bonelli, J. R. Jr., Brett, C. E., Miller, A. I., and Bennington, J. B. 2006. Testing for faunal stability across a regional biotic transition: quantifying stasis and variation among recurring coral-rich biofacies in the Middle Devonian Appalachian Basin. Paleobiology 32:2037.Google Scholar
Bowen, Z. P., Sutton, R. G., McAlester, A. L., and Rhoads, D. C. 1970. Upper Devonian deltaic environments. In Heaslip, W. G., ed. Annual Meeting of the New York State Geological Association, Guidebook 42:B1B11.Google Scholar
Bowen, Z. P., Rhoads, D. C., and McAlester, A. L. 1974. Marine benthic communities in the Upper Devonian of New York. Lethaia 7:93120.Google Scholar
Boyce, R. L., and Ellison, P. C. 2001. Choosing the best similarity index when performing fuzzy set ordination on binary data. Journal of Vegetation Science 12:711720.Google Scholar
Boyer, D. L., and Droser, M. L. 2009. Palaeoecological patterns within the dysaerobic biofacies: Examples from Devonian black shales of New York state. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 276:206216.Google Scholar
Bradfield, G. E., and Kenkel, N. C. 1987. Nonlinear ordination using flexible shortest path adjustment of ecological distances. Ecology 68:750753.Google Scholar
Brame, R. I. 2001. Revision of the Upper Devonian in the central-southern Appalachian Basin: biostratigraphy and lithostratigraphy. , Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Va. Google Scholar
Brett, C. E., Hendy, A. J. W., Bartholomew, A. J., Bonelli, J. R. Jr., and McLaughlin, P. I. 2007a. Response of shallow marine biotas to sea-level fluctuations: a review of faunal replacement and the process of habitat tracking. Palaios 22:228244.Google Scholar
Brett, C. E., Bartholomew, A. J., and Baird, G. C. 2007b. Biofacies recurrence in the Middle Devonian of New York State: an example with implications for evolutionary paleoecology. Palaios 22:306324.Google Scholar
Brunton, H. 1972. The shell structure of chonetacean brachiopods and their ancestors. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Geology 21:126.Google Scholar
Bulinski, K. V. 2007. Analysis of sample-level properties along a paleoenvironmental gradient: the behavior of evenness as a function of sample size. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 253:490508.Google Scholar
Bush, A. M., and Daley, G. M. 2008. Comparative paleoecology of fossils and fossil assemblages. In Kelley, P. H. and Bambach, R. K., eds. From evolution to geobiology: research questions driving paleontology at the start of a new century. Paleontological Society Paper 14:289317.Google Scholar
Clarke, K. R. 1993. Non-parametric multivariate analyses of changes in community structure. Australian Journal of Ecology 18:117143.Google Scholar
Clarke, K. R., and Warwick, R. M. 2001. Change in marine communities: an approach to statistical analysis and interpretation, 2d ed. Primer-E, Plymouth, U.K. Google Scholar
Copper, P. 1966. Ecological distribution of Devonian atrypid brachiopods. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 2:245266.Google Scholar
Copper, P. 1967. Adaptations and life habits of Devonian atrypid brachiopods. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 3:363379.Google Scholar
Copper, P. 1998. Evaluating the Frasnian-Famennian mass extinction: comparing brachiopod faunas. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 43:137154.Google Scholar
Day, J., and Over, D. J. 2002. Post-extinction survivor fauna from the lowermost Famennian of eastern North America. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 47:189202.Google Scholar
De'ath, G. 1999. Extended dissimilarity: a method of robust estimation of ecological distances from high beta diversity data. Plant Ecology 144:191199.Google Scholar
Dean, S. L., Kulander, B. R., and Skinner, J. M. 1988. Structural chronology of the Alleghanian Orogeny in southeastern West Virginia. Geological Society of America Bulletin 100:299310.Google Scholar
Dennison, J. M. 1970. Stratigraphic divisions of the Upper Devonian Greenland Gap Group (“Chemung Formation”) along Allegheny Front in West Virginia, Maryland, and Highland County, Virginia. Southeastern Geology 12:5382.Google Scholar
Dennison, J. M., Filer, J. K., and Rossbach, T. J. 1996. Devonian strata of southeastern West Virginia and adjacent Virginia. Pp. 354 in Dennison, J. M., ed. Geologic field guide to Devonian hydrocarbon stratigraphy of southeastern West Virginia and adjacent Virginia. Appalachian Geological Society, Charleston, W. Va. Google Scholar
Diener, D. R., Fuller, S. C., Lissner, A., Haydock, C. I., Maurer, D., Robertson, G., and Gerlinger, T. 1995. Spatial and temporal patterns of the infaunal community near a major ocean outfall in Southern California. Marine Pollution Bulletin 30:861878.Google Scholar
Dominici, S., and Kowalke, T. 2007. Depositional dynamics and the record of ecosystem stability: Early Eocene faunal gradients in the Pyrenean foreland, Spain. Palaios 22:268284.Google Scholar
Faith, D. P., Minchin, P. R., and Belbin, L. 1987. Compositional dissimilarity as a robust measure of ecological distance. Vegetatio 69:5768.Google Scholar
Fasham, M. J. R. 1977. A comparison of nonmetric multidimensional scaling, principal components and reciprocal averaging for the ordination of simulated coenoclines, and coenoplanes. Ecology 58:551561.Google Scholar
Filer, J. K. 2002. Late Frasnian sedimentation cycles in the Appalachian Basin: possible evidence for high frequency eustatic sea-level changes. Sedimentary Geology 154:3152.Google Scholar
Finnegan, S., and Droser, M. L. 2008. Reworking diversity: effects of storm deposition on evenness and sampled richness, Ordovician of the Basin and Range, Utah and Nevada, USA. Palaios 23:8796.Google Scholar
Fürsich, F. T., and Hurst, J. M. 1974. Environmental factors determining the distribution of brachiopods. Palaeontology 17:879900.Google Scholar
Goldman, D., and Mitchell, C. E. 1990. Morphology, systematics, and evolution of Middle Devonian Ambocoeliidae (Brachiopoda), western New York. Journal of Paleontology 64:7999.Google Scholar
Greiner, H. 1957. “Spirifer disjunctus”: its evolution and paleoecology in the Catskill Delta. Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, Bulletin 11.Google Scholar
Harrington, J. W. 1970. Benthic communities of the Genesee Group (Upper Devonian). In Heaslip, W. G., ed. Annual Meeting of the New York State Geological Association, Guidebook 42:A1A18.Google Scholar
Hendy, A. J. W., and Kamp, P. J. J. 2007. Paleoecology of Late Miocene-Early Pliocene sixth-order glacioeustatic sequences in the Manutahi-1 core, Wanganui-Taranaki Basin, New Zealand. Palaios 22:325337.Google Scholar
Hill, M. O., and Gauch, H. G. Jr. 1980. Detrended correspondence analysis: an improved ordination technique. Vegetatio 42:4758.Google Scholar
Holland, S. M. 1995. The stratigraphic distribution of fossils. Paleobiology 21:92109.Google Scholar
Holland, S. M. 2003. Confidence limits on fossil ranges that account for facies changes. Paleobiology, 29:468479.Google Scholar
Holland, S. M. 2005. The signatures of patches and gradients in ecological ordinations. Palaios 20:573580.Google Scholar
Holland, S. M., and Patzkowsky, M. E. 2007. Gradient ecology of a biotic invasion: biofacies of the type Cincinnatian Series (Upper Ordovician), Cincinnati, Ohio region, USA. Palaios 22:392407.Google Scholar
Holland, S. M., Miller, A. I., Meyer, D. L., and Dattilo, B. F. 2001. The detection and importance of subtle biofacies within a single lithofacies: the Upper Ordovician Kope Formation of the Cincinnati, Ohio region. Palaios 16:205217.Google Scholar
Kendall, D. G. 1971. Seriation from abundance matrices. Pp. 215252 in Hodson, F. R., Kendall, D. G., and Tautu, P., eds. Mathematics in the archeological and historical sciences. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Kenkel, N. C., and Orlóci, L. 1986. Applying metric and nonmetric multidimensional scaling to ecological studies: some new results. Ecology 67:919928.Google Scholar
Kirchgessner, D. A. 1973. Sedimentology and petrology of upper Devonian Greenland Gap Group along the Allegheny Front, Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland. Ph.D. dissertation. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Kruskal, J. B. 1964a. Multidimensional scaling by optimizing goodness of fit to a nonmetric hypothesis. Psychometrika 29:127.Google Scholar
Kruskal, J. B. 1964b. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling: a numerical method. Psychometrika 29:115129.Google Scholar
Leighton, L. R. 2000. Environmental distribution of spinose brachiopods from the Devonian of New York: test of the soft-substrate hypothesis. Palaios 15:184193.Google Scholar
Levinton, J. S. 1970. The paleoecologic significance of opportunistic species. Lethaia 3:6978.Google Scholar
Linsley, D. M. 1994. Devonian paleontology of New York. Paleontology Research Institution Special Publication 21.Google Scholar
Lundegard, P. D., Samuels, N. D., and Pryor, W. A. 1985. Upper Devonian turbidite sequence, central and southern Appalachian basin: contrasts with submarine fan deposits. Pp. 107121 in Woodrow, and Sevon, 1985.Google Scholar
McAlester, A. L. 1962. Upper Devonian pelecypods of the New York Chemung Stage. Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, Bulletin 16.Google Scholar
McCune, B., and Grace, J. B. 2002. Analysis of ecological communities. MjM Software Design. Gleneden Beach, Ore. Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr. 1976. Late Devonian benthic marine communities of the central Appalachian Allegheny Front. Lethaia 9:111136.Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr. 1977. The Frasnian-Famennian (Late Devonian) boundary within the Foreknobs Formation, Maryland and West Virginia. Geological Society of America Bulletin 88:806808.Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr., and Dennison, J. M. 1976. The Red Lick Member, a new subdivision of the Foreknobs Formation (Upper Devonian) in Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland. Southeastern Geology 18:4957.Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr., and Dennison, J. M. 1980. Late Devonian chronostratigraphic correlations between the central Allegheny Front and central and western New York. Southeastern Geology 21:279286.Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr., and Sutton, R. G. 1981. Late Devonian marine ecology and zoogeography of the central Appalachians and New York. Lethaia 14:2743.Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr., and Sutton, R. G. 1983. Evolution of late Frasnian (Late Devonian) marine environments in New York and the central Appalachians. Alcheringa 7:921.Google Scholar
McGhee, G. R. Jr., and Sutton, R. G. 1985. Late Devonian marine ecosystems of the lower West Falls Group in New York. Pp. 199209 in Woodrow, and Sevon, 1985.Google Scholar
McLaughlin, P. I., and Brett, C. E. 2007. Signatures of sea-level rise on the carbonate margin of a Late Ordovician foreland basin: a case study from the Cincinnati Arch, USA. Palaios 22:245267.Google Scholar
Miller, A. I. 1988. Spatial resolution in subfossil remains: implications for paleobiological analysis. Paleobiology 14:91103.Google Scholar
Miller, A. I., Holland, S. M., Meyer, D. L., and Datillo, B. F. 2001. The use of faunal gradient analysis for intraregional correlation and assessment of changes in sea-floor topography in the type Cincinnatian. Journal of Geology 109:603613.Google Scholar
Minchin, P. R. 1987a. An evaluation of the relative robustness of techniques for ecological ordination. Vegetatio 69:89107.Google Scholar
Minchin, P. R. 1987b. Simulation of multidimensional community patterns: towards a comprehensive model. Vegetatio 71:145156.Google Scholar
Minchin, P. R. 1989. Montane vegetation of the Mt. Field massif, Tasmania: a test of some hypotheses about properties of community patterns. Vegetatio 83:97110.Google Scholar
Muir-Wood, H. M. 1962. On the morphology and classification of the brachiopod suborder Chonetoidea. British Museum (Natural History), London.Google Scholar
Noy-Meir, I., and Austin, M. P. 1970. Principal component ordination and simulated vegetational data. Ecology 51:551552.Google Scholar
Oksanen, J., and Minchin, P. R. 2002. Continuum theory revisited: what shape are species responses along ecological gradients? Ecological Modelling 157:119129.Google Scholar
R Development Core Team. 2007. R: a language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna. http://www.R-project.org.Google Scholar
Racheboeuf, P. 1990. Les brachiopodes chonetacés dans les assemblages benthiques siluriens et devoniens. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 81:141171.Google Scholar
Redman, C. M., Leighton, L. R., Schellenberg, S. A., Gale, C. N., Nielsen, J. L., Dressler, D. L., and Klinger, M. K. 2007. Influence of spatiotemporal scale on the interpretation of paleocommunity structure: lateral variation in the Imperial Formation of California. Palaios 22:630641.Google Scholar
Roberts, J., and Ludwig, J. A. 1991. Riparian vegetation along current-exposure gradients in floodplain wetlands of the River Murray, Australia. Journal of Ecology 79:117127.Google Scholar
Rode, A. L., and Lieberman, B. S. 2004. Using GIS to unlock the interactions between biogeography, environment, and evolution in Middle and Late Devonian brachiopods and bivalves. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeogeography 211:345359.Google Scholar
Rudwick, M. J. S. 1970. Living and fossil brachiopods. Hutchinson University Library, London.Google Scholar
SAS Institute. 2009. SAS software version 9.2. SAS Institute Inc., Cary, N.C. Google Scholar
Scarponi, D., and Kowalewski, M. 2004. Stratigraphic paleoecology: bathymetric signatures and sequence overprint of mollusk associations from upper Quaternary sequences of the Po Plain, Italy. Geology 32:989992.Google Scholar
Smith, R. W., Bernstein, B. B., and Cimberg, R. L. 1988. Community-environmental relationships in the benthos: applications of multivariate analytical techniques. Pp. 247326 in Soule, D. F. and Kleppel, G. S., eds. Marine organisms as indicators. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, R. W., Bergen, M., Weisberg, S. B., Cadien, D., Dalkey, A., Montagne, D., Stull, J. K., and Velarde, R. G. 2001. Benthic response index for assessing infaunal communities on the southern California mainland shelf. Ecological Applications 11:10731087.Google Scholar
Springer, D. A., and Bambach, R. K. 1985. Gradient versus cluster analysis of fossil assemblages: a comparison from the Ordovician of southwestern Virginia. Lethaia 18:181198.Google Scholar
Rode, A. L. Stigall 2005. Systematic revision of the Middle and Late Devonian brachiopods Schizophoria (Schizophoria) and ‘Schuchertella’ from North America. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 3:133167.Google Scholar
Rode, A. L. Stigall, and Lieberman, B. S. 2005. Using environmental niche modeling to study the Late Devonian biodiversity crisis. Pp. 93180 in Over, D. J., Morrow, J. R., and Wignall, P. B., eds. Understanding Late Devonian and Permian-Triassic biotic and climatic events: towards an integrated approach. Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Sutton, R. G., and McGhee, G. R. Jr. 1985. The evolution of Frasnian marine “community-types” of south central New York. Pp. 211224 in Woodrow, and Sevon, 1985.Google Scholar
Sutton, R. G., Bowen, Z. P., and McAlester, A. L. 1970. Marine shelf environments of the Upper Devonian Sonyea Group of New York. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 81:29752992.Google Scholar
Swan, J. M. A. 1970. An examination of some ordination problems by use of simulated vegetational data. Ecology 51:89102.Google Scholar
Thayer, C. W. 1974. Marine paleoecology in the Upper Devonian of New York. Lethaia 7:121155.Google Scholar
Tomašových, A. 2006. Brachiopod and bivalve ecology in the Late Triassic (Alps, Austria): onshore-offshore replacements caused by variations in sediment and nutrient supply. Palaios 21:344368.Google Scholar
Virginia Division of Mineral Resources. 1993. Geologic map of Virginia, scale 1:500,000. Virginia Division of Mineral Resources.Google Scholar
Virtanen, R., Oksanen, J., Oksanen, L. and Razzhivin, V. Y. 2006. Broad-scale vegetation-environment relationships in Eurasian high-latitude areas. Journal of Vegetation Science 17:519528.Google Scholar
Webber, A. J. 2002. High-resolution faunal gradient analysis and an assessment of the causes of meter-scale cyclicity in the type Cincinnatian Series (Upper Ordovician). Palaios 17:545555.Google Scholar
Webber, A. J. 2005. The effects of spatial patchiness on the stratigraphic signal of biotic composition (Type Cincinnatian Series; Upper Ordovician). Palaios 20:3750.Google Scholar
Wildi, O. 1992. On the use of Mantel's statistic and flexible shortest path adjustment in the analysis of ecological gradients. Coenoses 7:91101.Google Scholar
Williamson, M. H. 1978. The ordination of incidence data. Journal of Ecology 66:911920.Google Scholar
Williamson, M. H. 1983. The land-bird community of Skokholm: ordination and turnover. Oikos 41:378384.Google Scholar
Woodrow, J. W., and Sevon, W. D., eds. 1985. The Catskill Delta. Geological Society of America Special Paper 201.Google Scholar
Zuschin, M., Harzhauser, M., and Mandic, O. 2007. The stratigraphic and sedimentologic framework of fine-scale faunal replacements in the Middle Miocene of the Vienna Basin (Austria). Palaios 22:285295.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Bush and Brame supplementary material

Supplementary Material

Download Bush and Brame supplementary material(File)
File 23.6 KB