Understanding the murky history of the Coral Triangle: Miocene corals and reef habitats in East Kalimantan (Indonesia)

被引:0
作者
Nadiezhda Santodomingo
Willem Renema
Kenneth G. Johnson
机构
[1] Natural History Museum,Department of Earth Sciences
[2] Naturalis Biodiversity Center,undefined
来源
Coral Reefs | 2016年 / 35卷
关键词
Mesophotic; Species turnover; Paleoenvironments; Diversity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Studies on ancient coral communities living in marginal conditions, including low light, high turbidity, extreme temperatures, or high nutrients, are important to understand the current structure of reefs and how they could potentially respond to global changes. The main goal of this study was to document the rich and well-preserved fossil coral fauna preserved in Miocene exposures of the Kutai Basin in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Our collections include almost forty thousand specimens collected from 47 outcrops. Seventy-nine genera and 234 species have been identified. Three different coral assemblages were found corresponding to small patch reefs that developed under the influence of high siliciclastic inputs from the Mahakam Delta. Coral assemblages vary in richness, structure, and composition. Platy coral assemblages were common until the Serravallian (Middle Miocene), while branching coral assemblages became dominant in the Tortonian (Late Miocene). By the late Tortonian massive coral assemblages dominated, similar to modern-style coral framework. Our results suggest that challenging habitats, such as the Miocene turbid habitats of East Kalimantan, might have played an important role during the early diversification of the Coral Triangle by hosting a pool of resilient species more likely to survive the environmental changes that have affected this region since the Cenozoic. Further research that integrates fossil and recent turbid habitats may provide a glimpse into the dynamics and future of coral reefs as “typical” clear-water reefs continue to decline in most regions.
引用
收藏
页码:765 / 781
页数:16
相关论文
共 192 条
  • [1] Bellwood DR(2005)Environmental and geometric constraints on Indo-Pacific coral reef biodiversity Ecol Lett 8 643-651
  • [2] Hughes TP(1984)Species concept and ecomorph variation in living and fossil Scleractinia Palaeontographica Americana 54 70-79
  • [3] Connolly SR(2010)Assessing the “deep reef refugia” hypothesis: focus on Caribbean reefs Coral Reefs 29 309-327
  • [4] Tanner J(2011)Diversity of Scleractinia and Octocorallia in the mesophotic zone of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia Coral Reefs 31 179-189
  • [5] Best MB(2012)Regional patterns of evolutionary turnover in Neogene coral reefs from the central Indo-West Pacific Ocean Evol Ecol 26 375-391
  • [6] Boekschoten GJ(2012)Coral reefs of the turbid inner-shelf of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia: an environmental and geomorphic perspective on their occurrence, composition and growth Earth Sci Rev 115 1-20
  • [7] Oosterbaan A(2010)Rethinking the phylogeny of scleractinian corals: a review of morphological and molecular data Integr Comp Biol 50 411-427
  • [8] Bongaerts P(2015)Climate-change refugia: shading reef corals by turbidity Glob Chang Biol 501 89-98
  • [9] Ridgway T(2014)Coral reefs next to a major conurbation: a study of temporal change (1985–2011) in coral cover and composition in the reefs of Jakarta, Indonesia Mar Ecol Prog Ser 25 329-340
  • [10] Sampayo EM(2006)Species richness and community structure of reef-building corals on the nearshore Great Barrier Reef Coral Reefs 10 173-185