Using platyceratid gastropod behaviour to test functional morphology |
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Authors: | Forest J Gahn Tomasz K Baumiller |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Paleobiology , Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC, 20013-7012, USA gahnf@si.edu;3. Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI, 48109-1079, USA |
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Abstract: | During the Mississippian (Tournaisian), numerous crinoid genera of the subclass Camerata evolved exaggerated anal tubes, cylindrical extensions of the tegmen with the anus at the distal end. Additionally, camerates exhibit higher frequency of platyceratid gastropod infestation than any other crinoid clade leading some researchers to speculate that anal tubes evolved in response to platyceratid parasitism. To test the infestation avoidance role of anal tubes, platyceratid distribution was analyzed among 636 tubed and 675 tubeless crinoids from Mississippian strata in North America. Results demonstrate significantly higher infestation frequency in tubeless crinoids. Rather than attach to the anal vent, as is typical for platyceratids, the gastropods that infested tubed crinoids are always found at the tube base and acquired nutrients from their hosts via drilling. It is likely that infesting tubeless crinoids was a more cost effective trophic strategy than drilling tubed crinoids. |
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Keywords: | Biotic interactions escalation functional morphology crinoids Mississippian platyceratids |
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