Published April 23, 2013 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: On the accuracy of paleodiversity reconstructions: a case study in Antarctic Neogene radiolarians

  • 1. Humboldt University of Berlin

Description

The deep-sea Cenozoic planktonic microfossil record has the unique characteristics of continuously well-preserved populations of most species, with virtually unlimited sample size, and therefore constitutes, in principle, a major resource for macroevolutionary research. Antarctic Neogene radiolarians in particular, are diverse, abundant and consistently well-preserved and evolved rapidly. This fauna is, in theory, a near-perfect testing ground for paleodiversity reconstructions. In this study we determined the diversity history of these faunas from a new quantitative, taxonomically complete data set from Neogene and Quaternary sections at several Antarctic sites. The pattern retrieved by our whole-fauna data set shows a significant, largely extinctionless ecological change in faunal composition and decrease in the evenness of species' abundances during the late Miocene, followed 3 Myr later, at around 5 Ma, by a significant drop in diversity. We tentatively associate this ecological event with a synchronous, regional change in the composition of the primary producers, but as yet cannot identify any environmental changes associated with the later extinction. Further, our whole-fauna diversity history was compared to diversity computed from much less complete, biostratigraphically oriented studies of species' occurrences, compiled in the Neptune database and reconstructed by using subsampling methodologies. Comparison of our whole-fauna and subsampling-reconstructed diversity patterns shows that the first-order trends are the same in both, suggesting that, to some degree, such literature compilations can be used to explore diversity history of plankton. However, our results also highlight substantial errors and distortions in the reconstructed diversity which make it poorly suited to more-detailed studies (e.g., for comparison of diversity history with paleoenvironmental history). We conclude that detailed studies of plankton diversity, and particularly those attempting to understand the relation between diversity and paleoceanographic change, should be based on taxonomically comprehensive, quantitative data.

Notes

Files

Supplementary Code 9.pdf

Files (2.6 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:2990f51eddb94f27bae96ea738c2e9fa
32.8 kB Download
md5:cfb1af9310261f373c7c1852c7617094
39.3 kB Preview Download
md5:e3d3319593eeb686d3413e6ea4201930
427.0 kB Preview Download
md5:7a20565f3189b737f64ef09d21c736a5
139.9 kB Preview Download
md5:a1dce31914c1d023e061e29c56cb7f53
236.9 kB Preview Download
md5:cd1384b5a9bc0d13b4d281e10538e5df
71.0 kB Preview Download
md5:3e29a3767871497dae5c38d196e48176
216.4 kB Preview Download
md5:2f6bde2dba1152bda316f54c5367f351
150.3 kB Preview Download
md5:73861363b1af120e7d134f4e69c97a9d
6.7 kB Preview Download
md5:fa27fc14e32d79d534d543110de5df21
1.9 kB Preview Download
md5:136a7530f1bd610293df26fb29500a54
1.2 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1666/12016 (DOI)