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Phenetic variability and functional morphology of erect cheilostome bryozoans from the Danian (Palaeocene) of Denmark
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2016
Abstract
Fragments of cheilostome and cyclostome bryozoans are the most common fossils in the mound structures commonly found in the Lower Danian limestones of southern Scandinavia. Sedimentological investigations and measurement of colony morphology combined with flume channel experiments indicate that: 1) The mounds were affected by unidirectional currents which created relatively high current velocities on the upstream flanks and summits, and low velocities on the downstream flanks and in the basins. 2) Colonies with slender stems and thin walls dominated in areas with low current velocities and those with thick stems and thick walls dominated in areas with high velocities. 3) The specific variability of the stem diameter was mainly controlled by the geometrical arrangement of the zooids. In general, species with a bilamellar arrangement of the zooids show high variability, whereas species with a radial arrangement show small variability. 4) Variation in the wall thickness is primarily related to the mode of growth of the individual zooids. In the ascophorans deposition was confined to the external surface of the stems. On the other hand, in the coilostegoid anascans the secondary skeletal material was deposited on all the internal surfaces of the zooids as well as on the external side of the cryptocyst. Cuticles do not seem to have been present in the secondary thickened part of the frontal wall of either the coilostegoid anascans or the ascophorans. 5) Calcareous material was deposited predominantly on the lower and older portions of the colony.
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- Copyright © The Paleontological Society
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