A new actinomycete from a Guadalupian vertebrate coprolite from Brazil |
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Authors: | Paula Dentzien-Dias George Poinar Heitor Francischini |
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Affiliation: | 1. Núcleo de Oceanografia Geológica, Instituto de Oceanografia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Rio Grande, Brazil;2. Department of Integrative Biology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA;3. Laboratório de Paleovertebrados, Departamento de Paleontologia e Estratigrafia, Instituto de Geociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil |
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Abstract: | Coprolites (fossil feces) are important sources of evidence of ancient food webs and ecosystems. Actinomycetes are a fundamental component in the decay of organic matter, and serve as catalysts for nutrient cycles. Recently, gas vesicles filled with numerous verrucose colonies of substrate mycelium of an actinomycete were discovered inside a fossilized spiral amphipolar fish coprolite recovered from mid–Permian deposits of Brazil. These colonies are composed of masses of substrate hyphae, some of which are undergoing segmentation. Arising from the colonies are chains of spores separated by narrow, elongate connectives. The fossil actinomycete is described below as Palaeostromatus diairetus gen. et sp. nov. and represents the oldest known actinomycete associated with vertebrate deposits. Since the colonies occur only inside the coprolite, either Palaeostromatus diairetus gen. et sp. nov. was part of the gut flora or it was acquired from a food source. The only other remains in the coprolite are eighteen paleoniscoid fish scales, which suggests that the producer was a carnivorous/omnivorous fish. This is the oldest record of a direct interaction between vertebrates and actinomycetes. |
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Keywords: | Actinomycete–vertebrate interaction coprolite Rio do Rasto Formation Permian |
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