mark a. s. mcmenamin department of geology and geography mount holyoke college 2010

23
Cambrian Cannibals: Agnostid Trilobite Ethology and the Earliest Known Case of Arthropod Cannibalism Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Upload: justina-day

Post on 31-Dec-2015

56 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

Cambrian Cannibals: Agnostid Trilobite Ethology and the Earliest Known Case of Arthropod Cannibalism. Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010. The Puzzling Agnostids. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Cambrian Cannibals: Agnostid Trilobite Ethology and the Earliest

Known Case of Arthropod Cannibalism

Mark A. S. McMenaminDepartment of Geology and Geography

Mount Holyoke College2010

Page 2: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

The Puzzling Agnostids

• Due to their small size, agnostid trilobites have defied attempts to properly interpret their:

• Affinities• Environmental preferences• Ethology• Feeding strategies or “eat-ology”

Page 3: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Peronopsis interstricta

• Middle Cambrian• Wheeler Formation• Millard County, Utah

Page 4: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Possible Evidence for Cannibalism

Page 5: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Bite marks to pygidial margin

Source: L. E. Babcock, 2003, in Kelley et al., ed., Predator-Prey Interactions in the Fossil Record

Page 6: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Agnostid damage: shredded thorax

N.B.: Trilobites are on the same bedding plane.

Page 7: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Captured small agnostid

Photo credit: Marian Rice

Page 8: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Damaged remains of smaller agnostid

Photo credit: Marian Rice

Page 9: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Seafloor “Snapshots”

Page 10: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Proportion of samples showing large and small agnostids juxtaposed

N=44; blue=juxtaposition; red=no juxtaposition

16%

84%

Page 11: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Proportion of multi-agnostid samples showing evidence of cannibalism

red=no evidence; blue=evidence of cannibalism

58%42%

Page 12: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

How might a “seek and destroy” . . .

• cannibal predator be blind?• Hypothesis: agnostids used an alternate

sensory modality, such as chemotaxis (or, say, response to electrosensory stimuli), to locate their prey.

• Is there any way to test this?• Let’s take a second look at the “snapshots.”

Page 13: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Chemotaxis and a possible spiralling approach pattern

Page 14: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Low-Res Movie Simulation

Page 15: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

The origins of cannibalism

Modified from J. Keith Rigby, 1978, Jour. Paleo. 52:1327 withdata from: D. Collins et al., 1983, Science 222:166, fig. 2.

Page 16: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Burgess Shale Stem-Group Priapulid Ottoia prolifica

Photo credit: Mark A. Wilson

Page 17: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Ottoia cannibalism

• Ottoia—Earliest known case of cannibalism, 505 my.

• The case for cannibalism here is fairly certain (as opposed to the alternative of scavenging dead priapulids by swallowing them whole), as cannibalism is common in modern priapulids.

• The Burgess Shale is slightly older than the Wheeler Shale; both are Middle Cambrian.

• No direct evidence yet to my knowledge for cannibalism in the Early Cambrian.

Page 18: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Early History of Cannibalism• Early cannibals are not necessarily associated

with vision-directed predation.• Ottoia and Peronopsis were both presumably

blind animals.• The earliest Cambrian ichnofossil Treptichnus

pedum may have been formed by a stem-group priapulid.

• The behavioral tools associated with macropredation may have been refined within a single species before being unleashed on the rest of the biosphere.

Page 19: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Triops longicaudatus

• Jessica McMenamin and our home school Triops experience.

Photo Credit: Steve Jurvetson

You are what you eat!

Page 20: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Triops and agnostid compared

Agnostus pisiformis: “possiblyraptorial antennae”—C.O.R.E.

Photo Credit: USGS

Page 21: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Arthropod Cannibalism

• DiscoveryNews discussion of cannibal agnostids; A. Horning comment.

• http://news.discovery.com/animals/early-animals-cannibals.html

Page 22: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Flip over all Burgess Shale agnostid specimens in your teaching collection

MHC Sample 3020Labelled Pagetia bootes (Walcott)

Unlabelled, new specimens of Ottoia on the reverse side!

Page 23: Mark A. S. McMenamin Department of Geology and Geography Mount Holyoke College 2010

Acknowledgments

• Thanks to: • Lee Bouse, Douglas Fleury, Jerry Marchand,

Jessica McMenamin, Steve Dunn, Marian Rice and Jacqueline Boisvert for assistance with various aspects of this research.