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Journal ArticleDOI

Shell ornamentation as a likely exaptation: evidence from predatory drilling on Cenozoic bivalves

TLDR
It is shown that ribs are most effective against drilling predation for bivalves with moderately sized ribs, between which gastropods have difficulty siting drill holes.
Abstract
Predation is an important process in modern oceans and in the evolutionary history of marine ecosystems. Consequently, it has been hypothesized that shelled prey modified their ornamentation in response to predation. However, bivalve ornamentation has also been argued to be important in maintaining a stable life position in the sediment and in burrowing. To test whether concentric ribs were effective against drilling by carnivorous gastropods, we examined drill hole position and completeness for four Cenozoic bivalve species that differ in rib strength (Astarte radiata, A. goldfussi, Lirophora glyptocyma, and L. latilirata). The percentage of drill holes located between the ribs increases with increasing rib strength, whereas the percentage of drill holes on top of ribs decreases. This result suggests that gastropods select the drill hole site more effectively as rib strength increases, thereby saving time and energy, and that natural selection favors gastropods that select drill hole sites betwe...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Predation in the marine fossil record: Studies, data, recognition, environmental factors, and behavior

TL;DR: A review of the types of paleontological data used to infer predation in the marine fossil record, discuss strengths and limitations of the evidence used to recognize and evaluate predatory activity, assess the influence of environmental gradients on predation patterns, and review fossil evidence for predator behavior and prey defense as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Paleobiology Database application programming interface

TL;DR: An objective is to outline how PBDB data can now be accessed within individual scientific workflows, used to develop independently managed educational and scientific applications, and accessed to forge dynamic, near real-time connections to other data resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competition between encrusters on marine hard substrates and its fossil record

TL;DR: If carefully interpreted, the fossil record of sclerobionts can provide an as yet largely unexploited resource for studying the long-term ecological and evolutionary dynamics of competition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Drill hole convergence and a quantitative analysis of drill holes in mollusks and brachiopods from the Triassic of Italy and Poland

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present quantitative evidence of drilling from the Late Triassic (Carnian) Cassian Formation of Italy and the Middle Triassic Lower Muschelkalk of Poland, documenting the first drill holes in Triassic brachiopods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subaerial naticid gastropod drilling predation by Natica tigrina on the intertidal molluscan community of Chandipur, Eastern Coast of India

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.
References
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Journal Article

Past: paleontological statistical software package for education and data analysis

TL;DR: PAST (PAleontological STatistics) as discussed by the authors is a simple-to-use software package for executing a range of standard numerical analysis and operations used in quantitative paleontology.

PAST: paleontological statistics software package for education and data analysis version 2.09

TL;DR: PAST integrates spreadsheet-type data entry with univariate and multivariate statistics, curve fitting, timeseries analysis, data plotting, and simple phylogenetic analysis, making it a complete educational package for courses in quantitative methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exaptation; a missing term in the science of form

TL;DR: This work presents several examples of exaptation, indicating where a failure to concep- tualize such an idea limited the range of hypotheses previously available, and proposes a terminological solution to the problem of preadaptation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Treatise on invertebrate paleontology

TL;DR: Treatise on invertebrate paleontology as mentioned in this paper, a Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology and its relationship with invertebrates, is the most relevant work to ours.
Book

Evolution and Escalation: An Ecological History of Life

TL;DR: Geerat Vermeij demonstrates that escalation--the process by which species adapt to, or are limited by, their enemies as the latter increase in ability to acquire and retain resources--has been a dominant theme in the history of life despite frequent episodes of extinction.
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