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Large extinctions of articulate brachiopods in the paleozoic and their ecological and evolutionary consequences
Authors:G. A. Afanasjeva
Affiliation:1.Borissiak Paleontological Institute,Russian Academy of Sciences,Moscow,Russia
Abstract:The largest Paleozoic extinctions of articulate brachiopods occurred at the Frasnian—Famennian boundary in the Late Devonian and at the Permian—Triassic boundary. Both extinctions affected taxa of all levels, including orders, but differed in scale, course, and ecological and evolutionary consequences. The Frasnian—Famennian extinction event was selective and evolutionary activity after the crisis varied in different orders. However, in the Early Carboniferous, the brachiopod diversity was mostly restored in comparison with the Devonian maximum. In particular groups, preadaptation played a role in changes in diversity and reconstruction of communities. The brachiopod composition at this boundary changed sharply. The extinction event at the end of Permian was global and accompanied by changes in the biota. Later, in the Meso-Cenozoic, the brachiopod diversity was not restored, and bivalves acquired primary importance in various bottom communities of different sea zones where Paleozoic brachiopods previously dominated. Extinction of brachiopods at this boundary was long and gradual. The symptoms of the ecological crisis in the development of Permian brachiopods are recognized beginning from the Roadian Age, which was probably the onset of this crisis.
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