2021
DOI: 10.1111/let.12441
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The functional performance of productidine brachiopods in relation to environmental variables

Abstract: Fossils are useful as palaeoenvironmental indicators when evaluated using large occurrence and lithology association data sets and/or functional morphology. However, when functional morphology is invoked on an ad hoc basis there exists a risk of circular reasoning. Performance spaces/landscapes constructed using biomechanical experiments can be used to tie performance to morphology quantitatively. They can be used to estimate fitness and function in specific environments by allowing multiple specific measures … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…New species that appeared after the first extinction pulse largely belong to the orders Productida and, to a lesser extent, Rhynchonellida (figure 2d). The shift to the dominance of productids, an order characterized by spines used for stability and/or defence, suggests a shift to a new ecologically distinct state across the shelf [45][46][47] that affected marine ecosystems worldwide [48], although it occurred unusually abruptly in the Appalachian Basin [29]. This new state persisted for the remainder of the Palaeozoic Era [48].…”
Section: (A) Ecological Stability and Niche Conservatismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…New species that appeared after the first extinction pulse largely belong to the orders Productida and, to a lesser extent, Rhynchonellida (figure 2d). The shift to the dominance of productids, an order characterized by spines used for stability and/or defence, suggests a shift to a new ecologically distinct state across the shelf [45][46][47] that affected marine ecosystems worldwide [48], although it occurred unusually abruptly in the Appalachian Basin [29]. This new state persisted for the remainder of the Palaeozoic Era [48].…”
Section: (A) Ecological Stability and Niche Conservatismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, some productid brachiopods use spines as stabilizers on the soft substrate (Leighton, 2000;Stanley, 2020). Experimental evidence also indicates that spinose ornament can increase the resistance to transportation in a higher hydrodynamical current (Alexander, 1984;Dievert et al, 2021;Garcia et al, 2018). Thus, there may be a relationship between shell ornamentation and the type of substrate in which living brachiopods inhabit.…”
Section: Re Sultsmentioning
confidence: 99%