Lecture 6: Life beneath the Palaeozoic ocean wave Flashcards

1
Q

As we’ve moved into the Proterozoic?

A

communities become more structured (things are starting to live in different places and eating in different ways).
more ecological interactions

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2
Q

Pelagic organisms (live in the water column):

Can be divided into…

A

planktonic -drifters/floaters

nektonic - active swimmers

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3
Q

Benthic (or benthonic) organisms, the bottom dwellers:

Can be divided into…

A

Epifaunal- live ON sediment surface and can be…

  • sessile/ anchored
  • mobile

Infaunal- live IN the sediment

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4
Q

What are Trilobites?

A

Three lobed…

  • head
  • body
  • tail

Mainly Benthic…

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5
Q

Arthropods

Among first to…

A

Develop vision
Sensitive to motion (prey)
some had stereoscopic vision (distance away)

rigid crystalline calcite lenses
good depth of focus and corrected spherical aberration

schizochroal eyes – fewer lenses

development of camouflage/ colour patterning

…accelerated evolution?

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6
Q

Arthropods

A

soft tissues
legs gill and antennae
roll up for protection- jointed

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7
Q

The first (Cambrian) reefs

A

Sponges made of calcium carbonate.
appear ~525 Ma
became extinct by end of the Cambrian

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8
Q

Corals arrive

Phylum Cnidaria

A
jellyfish, sea anenomes, corals
Cup shaped with tenticles
Benthic
Sessile
Much folded gut wall – increases digestive ability
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9
Q

Echinoderms

A

sea urchins, starfish
major components of reefs
disarticulate after death: produce crinoidal limestones

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10
Q

Brachiopods (Lamp shells)

A

all benthic (lowest point in water)
sessile filter
anchored by ‘stalk’
feeders (‘sit and suck’)

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11
Q

Molluscs

A

‘soft tissue’
Class Cephalopoda- most common (‘head foot’)
chambers: regulate buoyancy

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12
Q

First cephalopods were…

A

nautiloids (simple chambers)
had straight shells- cumbersome, buoyancy regulation difficult
‘orthocones’

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13
Q

Winding you up through the paleozoic…

A

Nautiloids into goniatites- had more and more coiled shells
Easier to move around (better buoyancy regulation)
More complex internal divisions

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14
Q

Written in stone

graptolites

A

resistant organic colonies (collagen)
filter feeders
earliest were sessile
later ones planktonic- didn’t have to attach

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15
Q

Palaeozoic plankton

A

as they evolve they reduce no. of branches (‘stipes’)
many 4
Ordovician: two stipes (“tuning fork graptolites”)
Silurian: one stipe (monograptids)
first macroscopic plankton

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16
Q

High ocean drifters

A

graptolite facies: defined association / environment
black shales
deep water, low O2
no benthos, preserved laminations, pyritic (FeS2)
dead graptolites drift through water column undisturbed

17
Q

Biological organisms are classified using

A

a hierarchical system

18
Q

Highest level of classification is into 3 domains:

A

Archaea, Eubacteria, Eukaryota

19
Q

The Eukaryota is divided into 4 kingdoms:

A

Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia

20
Q

Classification system

A
Kingdom
Phylum
Class 
Order
Family
Genus 
Species
21
Q

Lower levels of classification include…

A

the genus and species
these use “Linnean binomials” (i.e., two names)

NOTE: species names are italicised when typed (if you write them by hand they should be underlined: Homo sapiens)

NOTE also that family, order, class, phylum names are NOT italicised, nor are informal names, such as ‘hominids’

22
Q

Biostratigraphy: 1

environmentally controlled fossils can be used…

A

To trace similar environmental conditions through time

but these are no good for dating sediments.

23
Q

Biostratigraphy: 2

What properties make a a fossil useful for dating rocks?

A

rapid evolution/extinction
abundance
distinctive, easily identified
facies independence
mostly pelagic (or pelagic larval stages)
e.g., Silurian graptolite biostratigraphy

24
Q

Benthic (or benthonic) organisms, the bottom dwellers:

Infaunal

A

Live IN soft sediment (burrowers), or bore INTO hard substrates

25
Q

Something that lives within the water column is referred to as…?

A

Pelagic

26
Q

Something that lives in the bottom of the water is referred to as…?

A

Benthic

27
Q

How do arthropods grow?

A

By moulting their exoskeleton

28
Q

What were reefs in the precambrian like?

A

Reef systems made out of stromatolites.

These started to get eaten away by the browsers and grazers as we move into the Cambrian.

29
Q

Benthic meaning

A

Something that lives in the bottom of the water

30
Q

Sessile meaning

A

Anchored to ground

31
Q

Planktonic

A

drifters/floaters

32
Q

Nektonic

A

active swimmers