The diversity of teleost fishes during the terminal Cretaceous and the consequences of the K/Pg boundary extinction event

Werner W. Schwarzhans, Giorgio Carnevale, Gary L. Stringer
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Abstract

The Late Cretaceous was a time of blossoming teleost diversification that came to a sudden restriction and partial termination during the extinction event at the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K/Pg) boundary. Among the dominant and diverse Late Cretaceous teleost groups prior to the K/Pg boundary event were certain pelagic Aulopiformes (e.g., Ichthyotringoidei and Enchodontoidei) and a large variety of basal Acanthomorpha whose relationships are difficult to determine. The skeletal record diminishes during the late Campanian and is low in the Maastrichtian and Paleocene, constituting the so-called ‘Patterson’s Gap’. Recent studies of fossil otoliths, however, have significantly increased the number of taxa recognised for this time inerval, but most of the putative extinct forms lack adequate calibration with otoliths found in situ in articulated skeletons. However, the otolith assemblages do confirm the presence of great morphological diversity among Aulopiformes and Acanthomorpha incertae sedis that became extinct at the K/Pg boundary. In the present review, we elucidate the effect of the K/Pg boundary from an otolith perspective and categorise extinct lineages and survivors. It is interesting to recognise that several of the surviving lineages are represented by groups that probably originated during the Late Cretaceous but were not particularly common up to the K/Pg boundary and began to expand rapidly and diversify during the early Paleogene. Such lineages probably took advantage to populate void ecospace that may have opened following the extirpation of previously dominant lineages. During the early Paleogene, the otolith record shows that the Ophidiiformes and perciforms s. lat. were the ones that diversified the most rapidly and became the most abundant, and in certain areas associated with the Gadiformes.

白垩纪末期跃层鱼类的多样性和K/Pg边界大灭绝事件的后果
晚白垩世是桡足类动物多样化繁盛的时期,但在白垩纪-古近纪(K/Pg)边界大灭绝事件中,桡足类动物的多样化突然受到限制并部分终止。在K/Pg边界事件之前,晚白垩世主要的、多样化的远洋类群包括某些浮游的Aulopiformes(如Ichthyotringoidei和Enchodontoidei)以及种类繁多的基底Acanthomorpha,它们之间的关系难以确定。骨骼记录在营盘期晚期逐渐减少,在马斯特里赫特期和古新世则很少,这就是所谓的 "帕特森缺口"(Patterson's Gap)。不过,最近对耳石化石的研究大大增加了这一时期内已被确认的类群数量,但大多数推定的已灭绝类群都缺乏与衔接骨骼中发现的原位耳石进行适当的校准。不过,耳石组合确实证实了在 K/Pg 边界灭绝的 Aulopiformes 和 Acanthomorpha 现生类群中存在着巨大的形态多样性。在本综述中,我们从耳石的角度阐明了K/Pg边界的影响,并对已灭绝的类群和幸存者进行了分类。值得注意的是,一些幸存的类群可能起源于晚白垩世,但在K/Pg边界之前并不常见,而在古近纪早期开始迅速扩展和多样化。这些类群可能是利用了以前占优势的类群灭绝后可能出现的空白生态空间。耳石记录显示,在古新世早期,鹅掌形目和鲈形目(纬度)的多样化速度最快,数量也最多,在某些地区还与鳕形目有联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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