Ecology and evolution of the marine reptile faunas of the Jurassic sub-boreal seaway
Abstract
Jurassic marine ecosystems (ca. 201-145 million years ago) were dominated by three
different lineages of reptiles – plesiosaurians, ichthyosaurs and thalattosuchian
crocodylomorphs. Stratigraphic and fossil evidence indicates that these animals, like their
modern counterparts, were able to coexist in the same environment for over ~50 million
years from the Early Jurassic (~180 million years ago) to the Early Cretaceous (~130 million
years ago). Marine reptile ecosystems were often very diverse, and included animals from
different lineages, of disparate body-size and inferred ecology living alongside each other in
the same environment. This unusual diversity suggests that marine reptiles formed complex
ecosystems, and may have occupied analogous ecological roles today held by large fish,
sharks, crocodiles, sirenians, and cetaceans. However, these comparisons are essentially
qualitative, as they are based on the recurring convergent morphologies of skulls, mandibles
and dentitions in aquatic tetrapods. Yet, they have never been quantitatively tested.
Furthermore, although we have a comprehensive understanding of the anatomy, systematics,
phylogenetic relationships, physiology and feeding ecology of these extinct animals, little is
still known about the structure and evolution of their ecosystems. Thus, we do not
understand what enabled marine reptiles to form complex assemblages, how their fauna
changed through time, and more importantly how climatic and environmental changes
shaped their long-term evolution. Answering these questions is essential because
understanding past marine ecosystems may inform on whether and how modern ones can
adjust to changes in the ocean temperature, chemistry and sea-level.
In order to establish the reliability of these comparisons, in this project, I consider
the evolution of the diverse marine reptile fossil assemblage of the Jurassic Sub-Boreal
Seaway (JSBS) of the UK. The fossil record of the JSBS is an ideal case-study for many
reasons. Firstly, it is a well-documented, high-diversity ecosystem, represented by hundreds
of well-preserved specimens collected from the world-famous Oxford Clay Formations
(OCF Callovian-early Oxfordian, late Middle to early Late Jurassic) and Kimmeridge Clay
Formation (KCF - Kimmeridgian to Tithonian, Late Jurassic). These specimens have been
intensively collected since the XIX century, and are available in museum collections.
Secondly, the fossil record of the JSBS covers a continuous interval of ~18 million years
(middle Callovian-early Tithonian ~166-148 million years ago) of marine reptile evolution,
in a single seaway, during a time of well-documented environmental changes. These changes
in sea-level, temperature and chemistry happened in concert with drastic changes in the
composition between the OCF and KCF marine reptile faunas across the Middle-Late
Jurassic boundary. Unfortunately, to date, the attempts to understand whether there is a
correlation between these events have been hampered by the scarcity of fossils material from
the intermediate layers of the Oxfordian ‘Corallian Gap’.
After a brief introduction (Chapter I), this project articulates in two parts. In the first
descriptive section (Chapters II, III and IV), I set the bases for the second part by reviewing
the fossil record of ichthyosaurs, plesiosaur and thalattosuchians of the JSBS.
Particular
emphasis was put on the systematics of thalattosuchian crocodylomorphs, and the fossil
assemblage of the ‘Corallian Gap’. The second part of this thesis is an analytical section
(Chapters V and VI), in which, using a suite of numerical techniques, I investigate the
ecology, evolution and feeding ecology of marine reptiles through time. A summary of the
main conclusions and future directions are presented in Chapter VII.
Chapter II is a description of a new genus and species, Ieldraan melkshamensis, a
metriorhynchid thalattosuchian from the Callovian of England. The stratigraphic occurrence
of this new taxon demonstrates that all the macrophagous lineages of Late Jurassic
metriorhynchids originated in the Middle Jurassic, earlier than previously supposed.
This
also has important implications for the evolution of macropredatory features (particularly the
dentition) in this group.
In Chapters III and IV, I review the scarce fossil record of the Oxfordian ‘Corallian
Gap’, the least studied stage of the considered ~18 million-year interval. The results show
that despite the scarcity and poor preservation of materials compared to the underlying and
overlying fossil-rich OCF and KCF, a large variety of marine reptiles lived in the JSBS
during the ‘Corallian Gap’ (middle-late Oxfordian). The study confirms a drop in marine
reptile diversity in the Oxfordian, exemplified by the demise of several OCF taxa, but
partially counterbalanced by the contemporaneous radiation of some KCF lineages.
This
review confirms that a faunal turnover severely affected the composition of the JSBS across
the Middle-Late Jurassic boundary, and I hypothesise that these faunal changes may have
been driven by environmental perturbations during the Oxfordian. In Chapter V, I use the most common marine reptile fossils – teeth – and the revised
stratigraphic occurrences of the JSBS (from the previous Chapters), to investigate the
evolution of marine reptile groups, through time. Using a multivariate approach I established
a quantitative system to assign species to dietary guilds based on dentition features that
together with the availability of teeth, allowed examination of diversity and disparity patterns
at unprecedented time, and systematic resolutions. The results show that different
taxonomic/dietary groups did not overlap, suggesting partitioning of resources based on
diet/feeding strategy. The analyses show a decline of shallow-water specialists, the
diversification of macrophagous species, deep-diving taxa, and increasing body-size in
concert with a deepening of sea-level across the Middle-Late Jurassic boundary.
These
trends are not accompanied by drops in disparity, but by a selective decline/increase of
specific ecological guilds, that mimic the transition from shallow/nearshore to
deeper/offshore habitats in modern cetacean coastal assemblages.
In Chapter VI, I use a variety of multivariate techniques to present a quantitative
assessment of the feeding behaviour of marine reptiles. The aim of this study is
investigating the morphological and functional variation of ichthyosaur, plesiosaur
and thalattosuchian lower jaws. This is done using a variety of multivariate
techniques, and a biomechanical comparative approach. The analyses confirm
previous qualitative observations that the ecosystems in the OCF and KCF were
markedly distinct in faunal composition and structure. Phylogenetically closely
related taxa preferentially cluster together, with minimal overlaps amongst groups in
the morphospace. Focus examinations of key morphofunctional complexes reveals
that marine reptile subclades are characterised by different combinations that are
consistent with their inferred feeding ecologies (based on tooth morphology).
Overall,
the present quantitative results validate previous qualitative hypothetical feeding
ecologies, and reveal multiple instances of morphofunctional convergent evolution.
Overall my results also show that, like in modern ocean ecosystems, complex
mechanisms of niche and habitat partitioning may have facilitated the coexistence of diverse
marine reptile assemblages over tens of millions of years of evolutionary time.
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