Bryozoans and serpuloideans in skeletobiont communities from the Pleistocene of Sicily: spatial utilisation and competitive interactions

Autori

  • Antonietta Rosso Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche, Sezione di Oceanologia e Paleoecologia, Corso Italia 55, 95129 Catania, Italy
  • Rossana Sanfilippo Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche, Sezione di Oceanologia e Paleoecologia, Corso Italia 55, 95129 Catania, Italy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15160/1824-2707/361

Abstract

Sessile encrusters with mineralised skeletons in the fossil record generally retain their original spatial
relationships to the substrate and each other. Being short living and not significantly time averaged,
communities on shelly substrates represent excellent systems to study such relationships.
Bryozoan and serpuloidean skeletobionts on molluscs and rhodolites from Lower Pleistocene localities in
Sicily have been studied. Species composition and specimen sizes testify to a short exposure of the shells on
the sea floor. Skeletobiont community structure is characterised by the dominance of a few species (5
bryozoans out of 87 and 3 serpuloideans out of 17). Substrate coverage is usually low (<5%), rarely reaching
50-60% or more. On bivalves, skeletobiont distribution does not exhibit a clear trend for inner/outer sides or
left/right valves.
Oriented growths, differential patterns in microenvironment utilisation of the substrate and spatial
competition have been analysed. Several of the recorded overgrowths resulted from superimposition of
specimens growing on skeletons of previous, already dead encrusters. True competitive interactions mainly
involved bryozoans and only a few serpuloideans. Within bryozoans interspecific encounters usually led to
overgrowth or abutment whereas intraspecific encounters commonly resulted in standoffs and growth side by
side in cheilostomes, and to fusion of colonies in some cyclostome species.

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