Radley, 2006
| Author(s): | Radley, J. D. |
|---|---|
| Year: | 2006 |
| Title: | Grazing bioerosion on oyster concentrations (Lower and Middle Jurassic, England) |
| Journal: | Ichnos |
| Volume: | 13 |
| Number: | 1 |
| Pages: | 47-50 |
| Abstract | Grazing bioerosion, notably by chitons, gastropods and regular echinoids, is a powerful destructive force in many recent shallow-marine environments and impacts significantly on sessile epibionts through grazing predation and/or unselective dislodgement. Grazing bioerosion was an important component of a major phase of biotic escalation; the Mesozoic marine revolution. Recent investigations of hard substrates in southern British Jurassic marine formations have identified widespread ichnofossils attributable to grazing activity by gastropods and/or chitons, and regular echinoids. The co-occurring benthic macrofaunas include groups that would have been vulnerable to grazing disturbance and dislodgement; notably articulate brachiopods. The emerging ichnological evidence strengthens the argument for grazing bioerosion as a significant contributor to the Mesozoic–Cenozoic decline of the articulate brachiopods, and their retreat to deep-water and/or cryptic refugia. |
| Keywords: | Bioerosion, Jurassic, Trace fossils |
| DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1080/10420940500516339 |
| SARV-WB: | edit record |