The impact of lithification on the diversity, size distribution, and recovery dynamics of marine invertebrate assemblages
- 1Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802-2714, USA
- *E-mail: jsessa{at}psu.edu.
Abstract
Lithified marine sediments are not equitably distributed through time, raising the possibility that lithification masks biological signals when data from unlithified and lithified sediments are compared or combined. Using mollusk-dominated assemblages from the early Cenozoic of the Gulf Coastal Plain, we find that lithification conceals small taxa, decreases taxonomic resolution, and exacerbates the undersampling of rare taxa. Lithified assemblages appear less diverse and have less even abundance distributions than coeval unlithified samples. These limitations cannot be overcome by standardization procedures, nor are they likely to be circumvented by collecting larger samples. The effects of this bias, however, can be mitigated by restricting analyses to a single lithification state or to specific size classes. Since lithification selectively obscures small taxa, the magnitude of this bias will be most severe when organisms are particularly small, such as in the aftermath of mass extinctions. In the study area, lithification artificially protracts the recovery period following the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction by ~7 m.y.
Footnotes
-
↵1 GSA Data Repository item 2009033, additional analyses and methodological description, is available online at www.geosociety.org/pubs/ft2009.htm, or on request from editing{at}geosociety.org or Documents Secretary, GSA, P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301, USA.
-
- Received 24 June 2008.
- Revision received 18 September 2008.
- Accepted 1 October 2008.
- © 2009 Geological Society of America











