Abstract

Late Ordovician strata within the Cincinnati Basin record a mass faunal migration event during the C4 and C5 depositional sequences. The geographic source region for the invaders and the paleoceanographic conditions that facilitated dispersal into the Cincinnati Basin has previously been poorly understood. Using Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity, biogeographic relationships among Laurentian and Baltic basins were analyzed for each of the C1-C5 depositional sequences to identify dispersal paths. The results support multiple dispersal pathways, including three separate dispersal events between Baltica and Laurentia. Within Laurentia, results support dispersal pathways between areas north of the Transcontinental Arch into the western Midcontinent, between the Upper Mississippi Valley into the Cincinnati Basin, and between the peri-cratonic Scoto-Appalachian Basin and the Cincinnati Basin. These results support the hypothesis that invasive taxa entered the Cincinnati Basin via multiple dispersal pathways and that the equatorial Iapetus current facilitated dispersal of organisms from Baltica to Laurentia. Within Laurentia, surface currents and large storms moving from northeast to southwest likely influenced the dispersal of organisms. Larval states were characterized for the Richmondian invaders, and most invaders were found to have had planktotrophic planktic larvae. These self-feeding larvae have high dispersal potential, which - in conjunction with oceanographic and climatic conditions - enabled long-distance dispersal and interbasinal species migrations.

Highlights

  • The Richmondian Invasion, a regional invasion event that introduced over 60 genera from five phyla into the Cincinnati, Ohio, USA region, occurred during the early Richmondian Age

  • Wright & Stigall’s (2013) phylogenetic analyses of brachiopods that participated in the Richmondian Invasion identified multiple geographic source regions within Laurentia, including both a marginal basin and western epicontinental basin

  • Biogeographic patterns and dispersal pathways were analyzed using Parsimony Analysis of Endemicity (PAE), a quantitative biogeographic method used for reconstructing hierarchical area relationships in the absence of phylogenetic information

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Summary

Introduction

The Richmondian Invasion, a regional invasion event that introduced over 60 genera from five phyla into the Cincinnati, Ohio, USA region, occurred during the early Richmondian (late Katian) Age. Foerste 1912; Holland 1997) postulated that invasive taxa originated in equatorial regions within Laurentia, in what today is Canada and Wyoming. Jin (2001) proposed that at least some invaders originated in cool-water marginal basins around Laurentia and immigrated into the Cincinnati region as part of the broader Hiscobeccus expansion. Wright & Stigall’s (2013) phylogenetic analyses of brachiopods that participated in the Richmondian Invasion identified multiple geographic source regions within Laurentia, including both a marginal basin and western epicontinental basin. Anstey 1986; Webby et al 2004; Congreve & Lieberman 2010) have supported dispersal between Laurentia and Baltica or proposed Baltica as a source area for some Richmondian taxa (e.g. Leptaena, Streptelasma) Other authors (e.g. Anstey 1986; Webby et al 2004; Congreve & Lieberman 2010) have supported dispersal between Laurentia and Baltica or proposed Baltica as a source area for some Richmondian taxa (e.g. Leptaena, Streptelasma)

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