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Articles

Scarce ctenacanthiform sharks from the Mississippian of Austria with an analysis of Carboniferous elasmobranch diversity in response to climatic and environmental changes

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Article: e1925902 | Received 06 Feb 2021, Accepted 31 Mar 2021, Published online: 24 Jun 2021
 

ABSTRACT

The Carboniferous is characterized by drastic climatic and environmental fluctuations, which include multiple phases of glaciation resulting in an icehouse climate. Additionally, dynamic continental reconfigurations forced the contraction of the Rheic Ocean resulting in the closure of the Rheic–Tethyan Gateway, which precluded further faunal exchanges between the North American and Eurasian marine realms. Interestingly, cartilaginous fishes seem to be relatively immune to these drastic climatic and environmental changes. The Eurasian fossil record of Paleozoic sharks is strongly biased towards intensively sampled localities from England, Ireland, Scotland, and the Russian Platform. Here we present rare dental material from the Serpukhovian (early Carboniferous) of Austria, adding new information to the paleogeographic distribution of ctenacanthiform sharks. The new material revealed the first record of the genus Saivodus in Central Europe and allowed us to recognize a new species, Cladodus gailensis sp. nov., and a remnant of fossilized cartilage. In an attempt to identify possible linkages between climatic or environmental fluctuations on shark diversity throughout the Carboniferous, we provide a synopsis of the distribution and diversity of elasmobranchs based on primary literature. This preliminary assessment at genus level indicates two pronounced events of extinction, with the first one occurring during the latest Mississippian and the second one towards the end of the Pennsylvanian. The first extinction event distinctly correlates with the known diversity decline of other marine inhabitants and the second occurred during an unstable period of multiple phases of glaciation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We warmly thank J. Pollerspöck (Bavarian State Collection of Zoology, Germany) for providing literature, M. Dean (Max-Planck-Institute, Germany) for helpful comments on the fossilized cartilage, and L. Schnetz (University of Birmingham, U.K.) for discussions about diversity patterns. The LM Klagenfurt is thanked for funding of the Deep Time Maps (). A.O.I. was partly supported by the Kazan Federal University Strategic Academic Leadership Program. We are grateful to G. Cuny (Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France), J.-P. Hodnett (North Arizona University, U.S.A.), and the Associate Editor C. J. Burrow (Queensland Museum, Australia), for their constructive suggestions that improved the manuscript. J. J. Cawley (University of Vienna, Austria) is thanked for checking the English language of the final draft.

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