Abstract

AbstractIchthyosaurs were highly successful marine reptiles with an abundant and well‐studied fossil record. However, their occurrences through geological time and space are sporadic, and it is important to understand whether times of apparent species richness and rarity are real or the result of sampling bias. Here, we explore the skeletal completeness of 351 dated and identified ichthyosaur specimens, belonging to all 102 species, the first time that such a study has been carried out on vertebrates from the marine realm. No correlations were found between time series of different skeletal metrics and ichthyosaur diversity. There is a significant geographical variation in completeness, with the well‐studied northern hemisphere producing fossils of much higher quality than the southern hemisphere. Medium‐sized ichthyosaurs are significantly more complete than small or large taxa: the incompleteness of small specimens was expected, but it was a surprise that larger specimens were also relatively incomplete. Completeness varies greatly between facies, with fine‐grained, siliciclastic sediments preserving the most complete specimens. These findings may explain why the ichthyosaur diversity record is low at times, corresponding to facies of poor preservation potential, such as in the Early Cretaceous. Unexpectedly, we find a strong negative correlation between skeletal completeness and sea level, meaning the most complete specimens occurred at times of global low sea level, and vice versa. Completeness metrics, however, do not replicate the sampling signal and have limited use as a global‐scale sampling proxy.

Highlights

  • PALAEONTOLOGISTS are keen to discover a reliable means to identify completeness of the fossil record

  • During the Triassic, completeness is lowest during the Ladinian for all metrics (Fig. 2)

  • Most of the Norian specimens are from a small area of Canada, and there is evidence for a marine transgression during this stage (Edwards et al 1994), which may have led to a lack of restricted basinal facies that are associated with exceptional preservation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

PALAEONTOLOGISTS are keen to discover a reliable means to identify completeness of the fossil record. This could reflect some particular aspects of the sporadic nature of preservation of terrestrial fossil deposits and terrestrial tetrapods, so we chose to explore a group that is marine and apparently has a rich fossil record (McGowan and Motani 2003), the ichthyosaurs

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call