Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

First record of Late Miocene Dendrophyllia de Blainville, 1830 (Scleractinia: Dendrophylliidae) in Taiwan

2021; Springer Nature; Volume: 32; Issue: 6.2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.3319/tao.2021.09.13.02

ISSN

2311-7680

Autores

Lauriane Ribas-Deulofeu, Yen‐Chun Wang, Chien‐Hsiang Lin,

Tópico(s)

Evolution and Paleontology Studies

Resumo

The recently exposed outcrops along the Dahan River in Shulin, northern Taiwan revealed diverse and abundant marine fossils including molluscs, shark and ray teeth, sand dollars, and otoliths from a wide range of fish taxa.In addition, numerous small and fragile fossil scleractinians were found and identified here as Dendrophyllia sp., from the mainly azooxanthellate (90%) dendrophylliid family.Lithology of the outcrops are mainly composed of grey sandstones from the Tapu Formation (Late Miocene), overlying on a layer of basaltic tuff.The absolute age of the boundary between the Tapu Formation and the underlying Nanchuang Formation is 8 Ma, which provides indications on the maximum age possible for the scleractinian fossils found in this study.Back then, the marine ecosystem in which the sampled Dendropyllia specimens grew was probably a turbid shallow coastal environment with muddy to sandy bottom, likely at the vicinity of a river estuary, as suggested by the combined presence of previously reported fish otoliths.To our knowledge, this is the first record of Dendrophyllia fossils from Taiwan.

Referência(s)