Published November 6, 2020
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Probing the Ecology and Climate of the Eocene Southern Ocean With Sand Tiger Sharks Striatolamia macrota
Creators
- 1. University of Chicago
- 2. University of South Carolina
- 3. University of Vienna
- 4. Swedish Museum of Natural History
- 5. Purdue University
Description
Many explanations for Eocene climate change focus on the Southern Ocean—where tectonics influenced oceanic gateways, ocean circulation reduced heat transport, and greenhouse gas declines prompted glaciation. To date, few studies focus on marine vertebrates at high latitudes to discern paleoecological and paleoenvironmental impacts of this climate transition. The Tertiary Eocene La Meseta (TELM) Formation has a rich fossil assemblage to characterize these impacts; Striatolamia macrota, an extinct (†) sand tiger shark, is abundant throughout the La Meseta Formation. Body size is often tracked to characterize and integrate across multiple ecological dimensions. †S. macrota body size distributions indicate limited changes during TELMs 2–5 based on anterior tooth crown height (n = 450, mean = 19.6 ± 6.4 mm). Similarly, environmental conditions remained stable through this period based onδ18OPO4 values from tooth enameloid (n = 42; 21.5 ± 1.6‰), which corresponds to a mean temperature of 22.0 ± 4.0°C. Our preliminary εNd (n = 4) results indicate an early Drake Passage opening with Pacific inputs during TELM 2–3 (45–43 Ma) based on single unit variation with an overall radiogenic trend. Two possible hypotheses to explain these observations are (1) †S. macrota modified its migration behavior to ameliorate environmental changes related to the Drake Passage opening, or (2) the local climate change was small and gateway opening had little impact. While we cannot rule out an ecological explanation, a comparison with climate model results suggests that increased CO2 produces warm conditions that also parsimoniously explain the observations.
Data availability
All data and model results can be found online (https://doi.org/10.6071/M34T1Z).Files
Paleoceanog and Paleoclimatol - 2020 - Kim - Probing the Ecology and Climate of the Eocene Southern Ocean With Sand Tiger.pdf
Files
(4.2 MB)
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1029/2020PA003997
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:14004
Funding
- Austrian Science Fund
- P26465-B25
- National Science Foundation
- 1842049
- National Science Foundation
- 0923831
- National Science Foundation
- 1842176
- National Science Foundation
- 1842059
- Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas
- 2009-4447