Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Morphometric analysis of ontogeny and allometry of the Middle Ordovician trilobite Triarthrus becki
View through CrossRef
Traditionally, the distinction between meraspis and holaspis among trilobites has been based on the achievement of the full adult complement of thoracic segments. Using a large sample (over 700 specimens collected from a single bed) we explore the utility of employing the ontogenetic trajectory of the cranidium as an alternative means to differentiate trilobite growth stages. This method is particularly useful for species represented solely by exuviae and disarticulated individuals. We use geometric morphometrics to examine shape change among cranidia ranging in size from 0.9 mm to 11.6 mm in cephalic length. The 114 measured specimens exhibit a rather continuous gradation in size in which no distinct instars are evident.The meraspid and holaspid specimens exhibit allometry when partial warp scores and uniform components of shape derived from thin-plate spline analysis are regressed onto log centroid size. To describe allometric shape change, deformation vectors from the smallest to the largest specimen in both ontogenetic stages are presented in three different superimposition settings by using a new software program. We have concluded that a new superimposition method (the Sliding Baseline Registration) is a useful tool for visualizing allometry in organisms that contain an axis of symmetry. As a result, we conclude that allometry is evident in meraspides and holaspides, but the degree of allometry in holaspides is very small relative to that in meraspides. The boundary between meraspis and holaspis in Triarthrus becki appears to correspond to a large change in the rate of ontogenetic change, but neither to a change in the direction of that trajectory nor to a cessation of ontogenetic change. This boundary also corresponds to a cranidium centroid size that matches well previous determinations that holaspis begins at about 2.8 mm in cephalic length.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Morphometric analysis of ontogeny and allometry of the Middle Ordovician trilobite Triarthrus becki
Description:
Traditionally, the distinction between meraspis and holaspis among trilobites has been based on the achievement of the full adult complement of thoracic segments.
Using a large sample (over 700 specimens collected from a single bed) we explore the utility of employing the ontogenetic trajectory of the cranidium as an alternative means to differentiate trilobite growth stages.
This method is particularly useful for species represented solely by exuviae and disarticulated individuals.
We use geometric morphometrics to examine shape change among cranidia ranging in size from 0.
9 mm to 11.
6 mm in cephalic length.
The 114 measured specimens exhibit a rather continuous gradation in size in which no distinct instars are evident.
The meraspid and holaspid specimens exhibit allometry when partial warp scores and uniform components of shape derived from thin-plate spline analysis are regressed onto log centroid size.
To describe allometric shape change, deformation vectors from the smallest to the largest specimen in both ontogenetic stages are presented in three different superimposition settings by using a new software program.
We have concluded that a new superimposition method (the Sliding Baseline Registration) is a useful tool for visualizing allometry in organisms that contain an axis of symmetry.
As a result, we conclude that allometry is evident in meraspides and holaspides, but the degree of allometry in holaspides is very small relative to that in meraspides.
The boundary between meraspis and holaspis in Triarthrus becki appears to correspond to a large change in the rate of ontogenetic change, but neither to a change in the direction of that trajectory nor to a cessation of ontogenetic change.
This boundary also corresponds to a cranidium centroid size that matches well previous determinations that holaspis begins at about 2.
8 mm in cephalic length.
Related Results
Ordovician zircons as detrital markers in the Ötztal Nappe (Austroalpine, Italy)
Ordovician zircons as detrital markers in the Ötztal Nappe (Austroalpine, Italy)
<p>The Austroalpine &#214;tztal Nappe shows pervasive Eoalpine and local Variscan high-pressure metamorphism and deformation in its southeastern end, which ob...
Ordovician Intrusive‐related Gold‐Copper Mineralization in West‐Central New South Wales, Australia
Ordovician Intrusive‐related Gold‐Copper Mineralization in West‐Central New South Wales, Australia
AbstractThree major types of Ordovician intrusive‐related gold‐copper deposits are recognized in central‐west New South Wales, Australia: porphyry, skarn and high sulphidation epit...
Multi-layer Hydrocarbon Accumulation Model in Yuqi area, Tarim Basin, China
Multi-layer Hydrocarbon Accumulation Model in Yuqi area, Tarim Basin, China
The superimposed basins in western China have undergone multiple periods of tectonic changes and cycles of oil and gas accumulation, and the distribution patterns of oil and gas ar...
The Ordovician of the Korean Peninsula: a synthesis
The Ordovician of the Korean Peninsula: a synthesis
Abstract
The Ordovician succession of the Korean Peninsula is part of the Cambro-Ordovician Joseon Supergroup exposed in the Taebaeksan Basin of South Korea and the Pyeon...
Combination Patterns and Depositional Characteristics of Ordovician Carbonate Banks in the Western Tarim Basin, China
Combination Patterns and Depositional Characteristics of Ordovician Carbonate Banks in the Western Tarim Basin, China
Abstract:The combination patterns and depositional characteristics of the carbonate banks are investigated based on outcrop sections, thin sections, and carbon isotopes of Ordovici...
Rise of clathrodictyid stromatoporoids during the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: insights from the Upper Ordovician Xiazhen Formation of South China
Rise of clathrodictyid stromatoporoids during the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: insights from the Upper Ordovician Xiazhen Formation of South China
AbstractClathrodictyids are the most abundant stromatoporoids in the Upper Ordovician Xiazhen Formation (middle to upper Katian) of South China. A total of nine species belonging t...
Reservoir forming conditions and exploration potential of Lower Paleozoic carbonate rocks in Gucheng area, Tarim Basin
Reservoir forming conditions and exploration potential of Lower Paleozoic carbonate rocks in Gucheng area, Tarim Basin
The Gucheng region is oil and gas accumulation area of Tarim Basin,dominated by beach controlled lithologic oil and gas reservoirs,which has superior oil and gas accumulation condi...

