Title: Chapter 22 Paleozoic Life
1Chapter 22Paleozoic Life
2Life forms in the Paleozoic
- Paleozoic begins with the appearance of marine
skeletonized fossils of animals
- Contains the history of animal and plant
diversification in the oceans and colonization
of the land
Crinoids
3Important Paleozoic Invertebrates
- First we will examine the anatomical plans of
Trilobites, Brachiopods, Molluscs (clams, snails
and cephalopods), Echinoderms (starfish, sea
urchins and especially crinoids), and
Graptolites. - Later we will look at corals and sponges
4Trilobite shell morphology
Arthropod jointed-leg Related to Horseshoe cr
abs
What other arthropods do you know of?
5Brachiopod morphology
Sessile benthic filter feeders related to
bryozoans
Click for source
6Articulate BrachiopodsBrachiopod life positions 1
7Brachiopod life positions 2 Inarticulate
Brachiopod
Lingula Infaunal sessile benthic filter feeders
intertidal
8Bivalve morphology
Clams, Scallops Valves are mirror images
individual valve is not
9Gastropod (snail) shapes
10Cephalopod shell morphology
11Crinoid morphology
Stalked echinoderm related to starfishes, sea
urchins, etc
12 Graptolites
Related to ??? Often found in black shales,
deep shelf waters, no other fossils
Great index fossils
13What Was the Cambrian Explosion?
- The Paleozoic is marked by the abrupt appearance
of animals with skeletons in the rock record
- a mechanism that would trigger this event is not
agreed upon, but is surely due to a combination
of geologic and biologic factors
- Predators prominent
- shallow water
14The Emergence of Shelly Fauna
- Organisms with hard parts have many advantages
- protection against UV rays, allowing animals to
move into shallower water
- helps prevent drying out in an intertidal
environment
- provides protection against predators
15Small shelly fauna
Photos Drawings
16Cambrian Marine Community
- Many body plans are observed in Cambrian fossils,
more than in any other period
- trilobites - benthonic mobile sediment-deposit
feeders that crawled or swam across the sea
floor
- brachiopods - primitive benthonic sessile
suspension feeders
- archaeocyathids - benthonic sessile suspension
feeders and reef builders
17Invertebrates with hard parts
Brachiopods Note how the valves differ
Trilobites
Crinoids
Sponges
18The Burgess Shale Biota
- Consists of a rare preservation of soft-bodied
organisms Mid Cambrian
- Some phyla near the basic stock from which some
present-day invertebrates have evolved
- Other unique and without issue
- current debate centers around how many phyla
arose and how many extinction events took place
in the Cambrian
19Charles Walcotts Burgess Shale
-middle Cambrian shale in the Rockies of western
Canada
20Anomalocaris A huge predaor
Hallucigenia
Pikaia A chordate!!!
Sidneyia
Remarkable preservation of animals soft tissues,
plus the first predator, Anomalocaris
21Marella, a trilobitomorph or Lace Crab
Anomalocaris and some known prey.
Bite marks on fossils
22Leanchoilia--China
Leanchoilia--Burgess
23Opabina
24Interpreting Hallucigenia
Like the modern Peripatus, moist forests of
Cameroon, Discussion preadaptations to land if
food is present
25Pikaia
Totally unexpected find. Cartilage but no bone.
Jawless ancestor to fish, and us.
Maori legend of Pikea, the ancestor.
Lancets in comparative anatomy
Link to lancet info
Pikaia an early chordate! from the Burgess Sha
le
26Cambrian Trilobites
27Archaeocyathids (sponges?)
28Ordovician Marine Community
- Vast epeiric seas opened new marine habitats
- bryozoans, stromatoporoids, tabulate and rugose
coral reef builders
- reefs with high diversity - suspension feeders
- massive extinctions end Ordovician, glaciation in
Gondwana falling sea-level
Note large Orthoceras
Cephalopods as Index Fossils
29Bryozoans
30Halysites Tabulate Coral O-S
31Stromatoporoid - Hydrozoan coral or Sponge?
C - K
-
32Graptolite
33Silurian and Devonian Marine Communities
- Rapid diversification and recovery followed the
Ordovician mass extinction
- reef building by tabulate and rugose corals
- NEW PREDATOR
- eurypterids were abundant
- ammonoids evolved quickly and are important as
index fossils
- mass extinction at the end of the Devonian
collapsed the massive reefs
Marine Scorpions Track ways in coastal sands P
robably laid eggs as horseshoe crabs do
along the foreshore
Pterygotus
34Rugose Corals individual animals
Field Trip, Stroudsburg, PA
35Devonian Tabulate Corals
Colonial
36Brachiopod
37(No Transcript)
38Carboniferous and Permian Marine Communities
- Renewed diversity and recovery with adaptations
mark the Late Paleozoic marine communities
- bryozoans and crinoids reach their greatest
diversity
- patch reefs replace the massive reefs of the
Devonian TEMPS?
- fusulinid formanifera are important index fossils
39Types of Staked Echinoderms 1 Cystoids
40Types of Staked Echinoderms 2 Blastoids
41Fragments on Field Trip Stroudsburg PA
Types of Staked Echinoderms 3 - Crinoids
42Vertebrate Evolution
- Chordates have, during at least part of their
life, a notochord, dorsal hollow nerve chord, and
gill slits
- Vertebrates have backbones and are a sub-phylum
of chordates
- ancestors were soft-bodied and left few fossils
- a close relationship exists between echinoderms
and chordates and they may have shared a common
ancestor
43Fish
- Fish range from the Late Cambrian to the present
and consist of five classes
- Ostracoderms
- Placoderms
- Acanthodians
- Cartilaginous fish sharks and rays
- Bony fish
44Classes of fish through time
45Ostracoderms- Jawless fish
46Evolution of jaws
47Placoderms first fish w jaws
Dunkleosteous (Dinichthys) a Devonian arthrodire
48Placoderm - Bothryolepis
- Today we will examine another Placoderm
- Named Bothryolepis
- Its armor is similar to that of modern South
American catfishes that live in shallow, fast
moving, jungle streams in South America
49Acanthodian Placoderm a more usual body plan
Climatius, a Lower Devonian acanthodian
50Cladoselache fyleri, a 3-foot shark, was one of
the top predators in the Devonian seas.
Cartilagenous fishes Fossil Shark
http//www.exhibits.lsa.umich.edu/New/Welcome.html
51Ray-finned (Actinopterygians) and Lobe-finned
(Sarcopterygians)
Bony Fishes (Osteichthys)
52Rhipidistian fish
(Crossopterigian)
Field Trip Catskill fm. Bones of early Amphibians
Similar skulls, teeth, Bones in limbs. Fish limb
s not for walking
53Hyneria lindae from Hyner, PA
http//www.lhup.edu/jway/rdhll/RedHill.htm
54Amphibians -Vertebrates Invade the Land
- The first vertebrates to live on land, preceded
by plants, insects, and snails
- Barriers they had to deal with
- desiccation
- reproduction
- effects of gravity
- extraction of oxygen by lungs rather than gills
55Early Amphibian
Late Devonian Ichthyostega Skull, teeth, backbone
and tail are Rhiphidistian-like
56Labyrinthodont amphibian
Eryops, a carnivorous amphibian,
named for folds in teeth Pennsylvania to Early P
ermian
57Middle Carboniferous - Evolution of the Reptiles
The Land is Conquered
- The evolution of the amniote egg freed reptiles
from the constraint of returning to water to
reproduce
- amnion - liquid filled sac surrounding the
embryo
- allantois - waste sac
- a tough shell protects the developing fetus
- reptiles were able to colonize all parts of the
land
58Evolution of the Reptiles
Warm
- The earliest reptiles are from the Lower
Pennsylvanian
- called Captorhinomorphs, they were small, agile,
and fed on grubs and insects
- success due to advanced reproductive methods,
more advanced jaws and teeth, and speed
- Pelycosaurs evolved from this group and were the
dominant reptile by Permian
Cool
59Skull structure in reptiles
Function of Temporal Openings
Early Therapsids
60Pelycosaurs
Discussion Sail function Thermoregulation Arm
or
Courtship
herbivorous Edaphosaurus
carnivorous Dimetrodon
61Evolution of the Reptiles
- Therapsids succeeded the pelycosaurs during the
Permian
- mammal-like reptiles that quickly evolved into
herbivorous and carnivorous forms
- they displayed fewer bones in the skull,
enlargement of the lower jawbone, differentiation
of the teeth, and a more vertical position of
their legs - therapsids may have been endothermic, which may
help explain their distribution over wide
latitudes
- End Permian extinction eliminated about 66 of
all amphibians and reptiles
62Late Permian therapsids
63Land Plant Evolution - Silurian
Back to the early Paleozoic to consider plant
evolution
- Plants had the same water-to-land transition
problems that animals did
- vascular land plants have a tissue system to move
water
- nonvascular plants do not have this system, and
are usually small and live in moist environments
- seedless vascular plants such as ferns closely
resemble green algae in their pigmentation,
metabolism, and reproductive cycle
- green algae have also been able to make the
transition from salt water to fresh water,
leading some to believe that modern terrestrial
land plants evolved from them
64Silurian and Devonian Floras
- The earliest land plants are from the Silurian
- small, simple leafless stalks with a
spore-producing structure at the tip (Rhynia
drawing and modern Psilotum pictured)
- a rhizome (the underground part of the stem)
transferred water from the soil to the plant and
anchored it
- leaves, roots, and secondary growth all followed
during the Devonian
- The evolution of the first seed allowed land
plants (Seed Ferns) to spread over all parts of
the land
65Lepidodendron L Dev. Penn.A lycopod tree 90
100 feet tall
An important coal-former
66Calamites, a huge horsetail rush 10-14 meters
tall (Pennsylvanian)
67L. Dev E. Penns. Floras
Spenopsid (Horsetail Rush) Calamites shown
Lycopsid (club moss) Lepidodendron shown
- Source of coal
- Seedless vascular Need moisture to reproduce,
vulnerable to insect attack
- Lycopsids to 30m branches at top leaves similar
to palm
- Sphenopsids jointed stem underground rhizomes
- First Seed Ferns Late Devonian West Virginia
- seed ferns
68L. Pennsylvanian M. Permian Floras
- Seed-bearing vascular
- Gymnosperm trees - Cordaites, Glossopteris, and
others were able to colonize large areas of land
- many of these became extinct in the Late Permian
those that survived were able to tolerate the
warmer and drier climates
69Insects and other land arthropods
- Have a strong exoskeleton, impervious to water so
good for osmoregulation.
- Predation on plant spores probably a strong
selective pressure for seed coatings.
70Permian Marine Extinction Event
- The greatest recorded mass extinction to affect
Earth occurred at the end of the Permian
- about 90 of all marine invertebrate species
- fusulinids, rugose and tabulate corals, many
bryozoan and brachiopod orders, and trilobites
did not survive the end of the Permian
- causes for this have been speculated to be
- reduction in marine shelf as Pangaea formed
- global drop in sea level due to glaciation
- reduction in marine shelf due to regression
- climatic changes
Fusilinids, large forams
71Permian Extinctions
- S. A. Bowring, et. al. (1998) U/Pb Zircon
Geochronology and Tempo of the End-Permian Mass
Extinction. SCIENCE 280 1039-1045
- The mass extinction at the end of the Permian was
the most profound in the history of life.
- U/Pb zircon data from south China place the
Permian-Triassic boundary at 251 mya.
- Strata intercalated with ash beds below the
boundary Changhsingian pulse of the end-Permian
extinction (loss of 85 percent of marine species)
lasted less than 1 my. - At Meishan, a negative excursion in d13C at the
boundary had a duration of 165,000 years or less,
suggesting a catastrophic addition of light
carbon. GLOBAL FIRE!
72d13C
- 12C and 13C are stable isotopes of Carbon
- 12C 98.89
- 13C 1.11 in todays atmosphere
Negative excursions mean 13C down or 12C up.
73d13C
- Standard carbon in calcite from belemnites Pee
Dee Formation (abbreviated as PDB).
- The process of photosynthesis favors the lighter
form of carbon
- If you recall from the above brief discussion of
the soot found in the K/T clay layer, it appears
that a significant portion of the land plants
burned this would have released a great deal of
light carbon into the atmosphere - http//www.acad.carleton.edu/curricular/GEOL/DaveS
TELLA/Carbon/c_isotope_models.htm
74Extinctions aligned
Extinction
Extinction
Extinction
75Major mass-extinction events
Asteroid Impact
Asteroid Impact
Asteroid Impact
Asteroid Impact
Supposedly due to glaciation but it doesnt line
up with low water
Mention 26-30 my cycle of extinctions
76End of Chapter 22