Ediacaran metazoan reefs from the Nama Group, Namibia
Authors:
Penny et al
Abstract:
Reef-building in metazoans represents an important ecological innovation whereby individuals collectively enhance feeding efficiency and gain protection from competitors and predation. The appearance of metazoan reefs in the fossil record therefore indicates an adaptive response to complex ecological pressures. In the Nama Group, Namibia, we found evidence of reef-building by the earliest known skeletal metazoan, the globally distributed Cloudina, ~548 million years ago. These Cloudina reefs formed open frameworks without a microbial component but with mutual attachment and cementation between individuals. Orientated growth implies a passive suspension-feeding habit into nutrient-rich currents. The characteristics of Cloudina support the view that metazoan reef-building was promoted by the rise of substrate competitors and predators.
Friday, June 27, 2014
Cloudina Made Reefs in the Ediacaran NeoProterozoic
Labels:
animals,
Ediacaran,
fossils,
metazoans,
Neoproterozoic,
paleontology,
precambrian,
Proterozoic,
reefs
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