Abstract
Abstract. Changes in morphology during ontogeny can have profound
impacts on the physiology and biology of a species. Studies of ontogenetic
disparity through time are rare because of the lack of preservation of
developmental stages in the fossil record. As they grow by incremental
chamber accretion and retain evidence of growth in their shell, planktic
foraminifera are an ideal group for the study ontogenetic disparity through
the evolution of a higher taxon. Here, we quantify different developmental
stages in Jurassic foraminifers and infer the evolutionary implications of
the shape of these earliest representatives of the group. Using a Zeiss Xradia
micro-CT scanner, the development of Globuligerina bathoniana and Globuligerina oxfordiana from the Bathonian sediments of
Gnaszyn, Poland, and Globuligerina balakhmatovae and Globuligerina tojeiraensis from the Kimmeridgian Tojeira Formation of Portugal
was reconstructed. Disparity is low through the early evolution of planktic
foraminifers. The number of chambers and range in surface area per unit
volume are lower than in modern specimens. We interpret this morphology as an
indication of opportunistic behaviour. The low morphological plasticity
during the juvenile stage suggests that strong constraints on the juveniles,
described in the modern ocean, were already acting on Jurassic specimens.
The high surface area per unit volume in these developmental stages points
towards the need to satisfy a higher metabolic demand than in the adult
specimens. We are interpreting the lower chamber numbers as indicative of
short life cycles and potentially rapid reproduction, both of which may have
allowed these species to exploit the nutrient-rich waters of the Jurassic
Tethys Ocean.
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8 articles.
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