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Diverse and durophagous: Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans from the Scottish Borders

Diverse and durophagous: Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans from the Scottish Borders
Diverse and durophagous: Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans from the Scottish Borders

Chondrichthyan teeth from a new locality in the Scottish Borders supply additional evidence of Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans in the UK. The interbedded dolostones and siltstones of the Ballagan Formation exposed along Whitrope Burn are interpreted as representing a restricted lagoonal environment that received significant amounts of land-derived sediment. This site is palynologically dated to the latest Tournaisian–early Viséan. The diverse dental fauna documented here is dominated by large crushing holocephalan toothplates, with very few, small non-crushing chondrichthyan teeth. Two new taxa are named and described. Our samples are consistent with worldwide evidence that chondrichthyan crushing faunas are common following the Hangenberg extinction event. The lagoonal habitat represented by Whitrope Burn may represent a temporary refugium that was host to a near-relict fauna dominated by large holocephalan chondrichthyans with crushing dentitions. Many of these had already become scarce in other localities by the Viséan and become extinct later in the Carboniferous. This fauna provides evidence of early endemism or niche separation within European chondrichthyan faunas at this time. This evidence points to a complex picture in which the diversity of durophagous chondrichthyans is controlled by narrow spatial shifts in niche availability over time.

Ballagan Formation, post-Hangenberg, teeth, Tournaisian
1755-6910
67-87
Richards, Kelly R.
5a1fdb39-1581-43b7-a785-c680d80d0907
Sherwin, Janet E.
75342f8e-c886-4d21-a866-403b74208fa5
Smithson, Timothy R.
1f34d9ca-d0ee-44d7-876e-b167fef8e811
Bennion, Rebecca F.
46949735-960c-4bbd-8a8e-0bb16333e7e4
Davies, Sarah J.
9c08e102-7013-4ee4-9076-565ad12235cc
Marshall, John E.A.
cba178e3-91aa-49a2-b2ce-4b8d9d870b06
Clack, Jennifer A.
0210709c-82fb-46f9-934e-58c31bc644a1
Richards, Kelly R.
5a1fdb39-1581-43b7-a785-c680d80d0907
Sherwin, Janet E.
75342f8e-c886-4d21-a866-403b74208fa5
Smithson, Timothy R.
1f34d9ca-d0ee-44d7-876e-b167fef8e811
Bennion, Rebecca F.
46949735-960c-4bbd-8a8e-0bb16333e7e4
Davies, Sarah J.
9c08e102-7013-4ee4-9076-565ad12235cc
Marshall, John E.A.
cba178e3-91aa-49a2-b2ce-4b8d9d870b06
Clack, Jennifer A.
0210709c-82fb-46f9-934e-58c31bc644a1

Richards, Kelly R., Sherwin, Janet E., Smithson, Timothy R., Bennion, Rebecca F., Davies, Sarah J., Marshall, John E.A. and Clack, Jennifer A. (2018) Diverse and durophagous: Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans from the Scottish Borders. Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 108 (1), 67-87. (doi:10.1017/S1755691018000166).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Chondrichthyan teeth from a new locality in the Scottish Borders supply additional evidence of Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans in the UK. The interbedded dolostones and siltstones of the Ballagan Formation exposed along Whitrope Burn are interpreted as representing a restricted lagoonal environment that received significant amounts of land-derived sediment. This site is palynologically dated to the latest Tournaisian–early Viséan. The diverse dental fauna documented here is dominated by large crushing holocephalan toothplates, with very few, small non-crushing chondrichthyan teeth. Two new taxa are named and described. Our samples are consistent with worldwide evidence that chondrichthyan crushing faunas are common following the Hangenberg extinction event. The lagoonal habitat represented by Whitrope Burn may represent a temporary refugium that was host to a near-relict fauna dominated by large holocephalan chondrichthyans with crushing dentitions. Many of these had already become scarce in other localities by the Viséan and become extinct later in the Carboniferous. This fauna provides evidence of early endemism or niche separation within European chondrichthyan faunas at this time. This evidence points to a complex picture in which the diversity of durophagous chondrichthyans is controlled by narrow spatial shifts in niche availability over time.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 October 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 July 2018
Published date: July 2018
Keywords: Ballagan Formation, post-Hangenberg, teeth, Tournaisian

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 425339
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/425339
ISSN: 1755-6910
PURE UUID: cbfe81d8-ad63-4188-9910-39f55dc03efc
ORCID for John E.A. Marshall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9242-3646

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Oct 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:35

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Contributors

Author: Kelly R. Richards
Author: Janet E. Sherwin
Author: Timothy R. Smithson
Author: Rebecca F. Bennion
Author: Sarah J. Davies
Author: Jennifer A. Clack

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