Our latest work.
A. Brayard, L. J. Krumenacker, J. P. Botting, J. F. Jenks, K. G. Bylund, E. Fara, E. Vennin,
N. Olivier, N. Goudemand, T. Saucède, S. Charbonnier, C. Romano, L. Doguzhaeva, B. Thuy,
M. Hautmann, D. A. Stephen, C. Thomazo, G. Escarguel, Unexpected Early Triassic marine
ecosystem and the rise of the Modern evolutionary fauna. Sci. Adv. 3, e1602159 (2017).
In the wake of the end-Permian mass extinction, the Early
Triassic (~251.9 to 247 million years ago) is portrayed as an environmentally
unstable interval characterized by several biotic crises and heavily
depauperate marine benthic ecosystems. We describe a new fossil assemblage—the
Paris Biota—from the earliest Spathian (middle Olenekian, ~250.6 million years
ago) of the Bear Lake area, southeastern Idaho, USA. This highly diversified
assemblage documents a remarkably complex marine ecosystem including at least
seven phyla and 20 distinct metazoan orders, alongwith algae.Most unexpectedly,
it combines early Paleozoic and middle Mesozoic taxa previously unknown from the
Triassic strata, among which are primitive Cambrian-Ordovician leptomitid
sponges (a 200–million year Lazarus taxon) and gladius-bearing coleoid cephalopods, a
poorly documented group before the Jurassic (~50 million years after the Early
Triassic). Additionally, the crinoid and ophiuroid specimens show derived
anatomical characters that were thought to have evolved much later. Unlike
previous works that suggested a sluggish postcrisis recovery and a low
diversity for the Early Triassic benthic organisms, the unexpected composition
of this exceptional assemblage points toward an early and rapid post-Permian
diversification for these clades. Overall, it illustrates a phylogenetically
diverse, functionally complex, and trophically multileveled marine ecosystem,
from primary producers up to top predators and potential scavengers. Hence, the
Paris Biota highlights the key evolutionary position of Early Triassic fossil
ecosystems in the transition from the Paleozoic to the Modern marine
evolutionary fauna at the dawn of the Mesozoic era.