INVESTIGADORES
NAÑEZ Carolina Adela
capítulos de libros
Título:
Bioerosion patterns in Cretaceous-Cenozoic benthic foraminiferal tests from Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego Island, Argentina.
Autor/es:
MALUMIÁN, N., LÓPEZ C., M.I., NÁÑEZ, C. Y OLIVERO, E.B.
Libro:
Sediment-organism interactions: a multifaceted ichnology
Editorial:
Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM)
Referencias:
Lugar: Tulsa; Año: 2007; p. 301 - 308
Resumen:
Abstract: Cretaceous-Cenozoic benthic foraminiferal assemblages from Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego are mainly characteristic of shallow settings of the cool-temperate Austral geobioprovince, lacking larger foraminifera. A survey of more than 2000 samples, including illustrations in systematic papers, shows that bioeroded tests are uncommon. However, a general pattern is indicated by (a) an apparent chronological distribution of boring abundance and diversity: during the early Cretaceous - Campanian, borings are very rare; in the Maastrichtian - Paleocene, rare. In the Mid-Eocene an increased abundance of borings and boring types is apparent, including: circular, subcircular, roughly or neatly beveled; multiple, concentrated in juvenile chambers or one per chamber; and associated with main or supplementary apertures. (b) Taxa selectivity: predator preferences are mainly evident among the most common species, in genera either of Antarctic origin (e.g. Ammoelphidiella) or abundant in cool-temperate waters (e.g. Buccella), and in elongate thin-walled genera (e.g. Bulimina, Buliminella, Praebulimina). (c) Site selectivity: this is evident in a non-random distribution of borings observed in several cases. Scarcity or absence of bioerosion in the Lower Cretaceous may be related to widespread dysaerobic-anaerobic conditions that could diminish predation pressure and/or the dominance of finely perforate thick-walled Nodosariacea. Increased bioerosion in the Mid Eocene, coincident with a temperature fall during the Cenozoic long cooling trend, affects genera that previously were recorded as intensively bored from the Antarctic Pliocene, giving a polar aspect to many Fuegian foraminiferal assemblages