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Historical Biology
An International Journal of Paleobiology
Volume 33, 2021 - Issue 12
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Research Article

Behaviour of the oyster Rhynchostreon suborbiculatum assemblages in a Cenomanian-Turonian river dominated marginal-marine environment: multidisciplinary study from the Pieniny Klippen Belt (Western Carpathians, Slovakia)

Pages 3340-3360 | Received 08 Jun 2020, Accepted 17 Dec 2020, Published online: 18 Jan 2021
 

ABSTRACT

The tens of metres thick shell accumulations within the Cenomanian-Turonian strata of Western Carpathians enabled a complex study of ecological and geochemical proxies in relation to behavioural patterns of oyster Rhynchostreon suborbiculatum. Integration of geological and palaeobiological approaches enabled comparisons between one of the most famous fossil oyster species and several Recent bivalves. The analysis of grain size (Qz) and major oxides, together with taphonomic and population analysis, reveals a high-energy marginal-marine environment in the sedimentation area of the Orlové Sandstone. The life conditions of the association of bivalves, gastropods and polychaetes were influenced by the fluctuating influx of freshwater due to climatic changes that occurred during a dynamic period of the Late Cretaceous. A shift in the prominent control of biological production caused a massive increase in α-diversity, in conjunction with a change in the trophic structure of the studied system. The ecological responses of organismal association were also analogous to Recent representatives inhabiting marginal-marine environments. Size and allometric analyses of oysters forming monospecific assemblages show that their high density correlates with smaller shell sizes, indicating that intraspecific competition for food and space most intensified at times of the lowest salinity.

Acknowledgments

The author strongly acknowledges the constructive remarks of Dr. Martin Košťák (Faculty of Science, Charles University), which greatly improved the manuscript. Special thanks are given to Dr. Jozef Michalík (Earth Science Institute, Slovak Academy of Science) for providing knowledge about the Hôrka site and kindly providing his unpublished sketch of the cross-section for editing. Thanks are also owed to Drs. Radek Mikuláš (Institute of Geology, Czech Academy of Sciences) and Vladimír Šimo (Earth Science Institute, Slovak Academy of Science) for consultation about trace fossils, and to Drs. Tomáš Kočí (National Museum) and Manfred Jäger for determination of polychaetes. For pertinent revisions, corrections and comments on an earlier version of the manuscript, thanks belong to reviewers Dr. Adam Tomašových (Earth Science Institute, Slovak Academy of Science) and Dr. Stanislav Čech (Czech Geological Survey). Finally, special thanks go to Dr. Gareth Dyke for his excellent editorial work.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Charles University Grant Agency under Grant No. 816416.

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