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Escalation and extinction selectivity: morphology versus isotopic reconstruction of bivalve metabolism
Authors:Dietl Gregory P  Kelley Patricia H  Barrick Reese  Showers William
Institution:Department of Zoology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7617 E-mail:;Department of Earth Sciences, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina 28403-5944 E-mail:;Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-8208
Abstract:Studies that have tested and failed to support the hypothesis that escalated species (e.g., those with predation-resistant adaptations) are more susceptible to elimination during mass extinctions have concentrated on the distribution and degree of morphological defenses in molluscan species. This morphological approach to determining level of escalation in bivalves may be oversimplified because it does not account for metabolic rate, which is an important measure of escalation that is less readily accessible for fossils. Shell growth rates in living bivalves are positively correlated with metabolic rate and thus are potential indicators of level of escalation. To evaluate this approach, we used oxygen isotopes to reconstruct shell growth rates for two bivalve species (Macrocallista marylandica and Glossus markoei) from Miocene-aged sediments of Maryland. Although both species are classified as non-escalated based on morphology, the isotopic data indicate that M. marylandica was a faster-growing species with a higher metabolic rate and G. markoei was a slower-growing species with a lower metabolic rate. Based on these results, we predict that some morphologically non-escalated species in previous tests of extinction selectivity should be reclassified as escalated because of their fast shell growth rates (i.e., high metabolic rates). Studies that evaluate the level of escalation of a fauna should take into account the energetic physiology of taxa to avoid misleading results.
Keywords:Escalation  extinction selectivity  isotopes  metabolism  predation  shell growth rates
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