Owing to the assumed lack of deep-sea macrofossils older than the Late Cretaceous, very little is known about the geological history of deep-sea communities, andmost inference-based hypotheses argue for repeated recolonizations of the deep sea fromshelf habitats followingmajor palaeoceanographic perturbations.We present a fossil deep-sea assemblage of echinoderms, gastropods, brachiopods and ostracods, from the Early Jurassic of the Glasenbach Gorge, Austria, which includes the oldest known representatives of a number of extant deep-sea groups, and thus implies that in situ diversification, in contrast to immigration from shelf habitats, played a much greater role in shaping modern deep-sea biodiversity than previously thought. A comparison with coeval shelf assemblages reveals that, at least in some of the analysed groups, significantly more extant families/superfamilies have endured in the deep sea since the Early Jurassic than in the shelf seas, which suggests that deepsea biota are more resilient against extinction than shallow-water ones. In addition, a number of extant deep-sea families/superfamilies found in the Glasenbach assemblage lack post-Jurassic shelf occurrences, implying that if there was a complete extinction of the deep-sea fauna followed by replacement from the shelf, it must have happened before the Late Jurassic. © 2014 The Authors Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Thuy, B., Kiel, S., Dulai, A., Gale, A. S., Kroh, A., Lord, A. R., … Wisshak, M. (2014). First glimpse into Lower Jurassic deep-sea biodiversity: In situ diversification and resilience against extinction. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 281(1786). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2013.2624
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