S
Subhronil Mondal
Researcher at University of Calcutta
Publications - 37
Citations - 298
Subhronil Mondal is an academic researcher from University of Calcutta. The author has contributed to research in topics: Predation & Geology. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 33 publications receiving 251 citations. Previous affiliations of Subhronil Mondal include University of South Florida & Indian Institute of Science.
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Record of intense predatory drilling from Upper Jurassic bivalves of Kutch, India: Implications for the history of biotic interaction
Subhendu Bardhan,Devapriya Chattopadhyay,Subhronil Mondal,Shiladri S. Das,Sumanta Mallick,Arindam Roy,Piyali Chanda +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported 148 drilled bivalve specimens of a single species from the Upper Jurassic horizon in western India, the highest number for any taxon ever recorded since Precambrian to Cretaceous.
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Subaerial naticid gastropod drilling predation by Natica tigrina on the intertidal molluscan community of Chandipur, Eastern Coast of India
Arijit Pahari,Subhronil Mondal,Subhendu Bardhan,Debattam Sarkar,Sandip Saha,Dipankar Buragohain +5 more
TL;DR: Detailed quantitative analyses of the present study revealed that N. tigrina attacks opportunistically on all infaunal and epifaunal intertidal bivalve and gastropod prey taxa, indicating that the predator was highly efficient.
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Phanerozoic trends in ecospace utilization: The bivalve perspective
TL;DR: This Phanerozoic-level study on the Class Bivalvia, a group with a very robust and virtually unparalleled fossil record, the clade's ecologic diversity is reconstructed based on a set of newly compiled taxonomic and ecologic databases that were initially derived from a combination of the Sepkoski Compendium and the Paleobiology Database.
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Predation on Recent Turritelline Gastropods from the Indian Subcontinent and Comparison with a Revised Global Database
TL;DR: The intensity of predation (both drilling and peeling) on Recent turritelline gastropods from the Indian subcontinent, which has been underrepresented in previous studies, is estimated.
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A note on exceptionally high confamilial naticid drilling frequency on Natica gualteriana from the Indian subcontinent
TL;DR: The different aspects of confamilial predation from the Indian coasts were studied and showed that the predators in Chandipur were highly efficient as evident from high drilling frequency (DF), site stereotypy and low prey effectiveness.