New insights on the benthic Foraminifera at the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary (OAE2) aftermath and the role of the genus Rotorbinella Bandy through the Late Cretaceous
Conference Poster
Publication Date:
2023
abstract:
The Late Cretaceous was characterized by extremely high temperatures. The modeled CO2 concentration in the
atmosphere is among the highest of the entire Phanerozoic and it has been considered the main driver of such trend. The
gradual warming started in the Albian and culminated during the Cretaceous Thermal Maximum (KTM) across the Late
Cenomanian and early Turonian where sea-surface temperatures reached >=30 °C in the tropics and >=20 °C in the
southern mid- to high latitudes. This has produced the flooding of large portions of continents and created shallow water
environments suitable for the development of carbonate platforms and their associated benthic biota.
Data at our disposal on rotaloidean Foraminifera place their very first appearance in shallow-water platforms shortly
before the KTM, in the early Cenomanian, or during the late Albian. They were represented by small r-strategist
Rotorbinella and Pararotalia, thought later extinct at the Cenomanian-Turonian Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE2), along
with all the Cenomanian larger foraminifera. The KTM was followed by a long-term gradual cooling which lasted until
the Maastrichtian, where Tethys benthic foraminifera experienced a striking diversification. Rotaloideans evolved and
diversified independently, following biprovincial and/or endemic patterns. The genus Rotorbinella is known in the
Santonian-Campanian of the central-western Atlantic Tethys (Pyrenean gulf) and central Tethys (e.i. isolated platforms
of the Apennines and Adriatic area) occurring along with other several rotaloideans. In the eastern Tethys (Arabian
platforms) and westernmost Tethys (Caribbean) an apparently hybrid association with endemic species is recorded in
the Santonian-Campanian timespan. Several species are also described from the uppermost Cretaceous of the
Caribbean, southern Spain and the Arabian platform.
Such an outstanding richness of rotaloideans was poorly known, and several of these morphotypes have been
systematically described in recent decades only. The high diversity roots on the possible survival of some small
Cenomanian r-strategist across the OAE2 with capability to survive or stay in quiescence. It is thus of a key aspect to
understand what was the evolutionary history of the group nearby the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary (OAE2) and
how really this event impacted or boosted on its evolution. To do so we have sampled a Cenomanian-Turonian shallowwater
succession cropping out in the Friuli region (Adriatic Carbonate Platform), and performed a detailed temperature
trends with absolute estimations at a very high temporal resolution. Furthermore, we have also collected inedited data
from the very poorly known "Rotalia skourensis" assemblage of the Coniacian-Santonian of Iran (Arabian platform).
Results show that i) in the Adriatic, Rotorbinella occurs in the late early Turonian, along with several Late
Cretaceous 'newcomers', including the genus Rotalispira, once temperatures started dropping; ii) in the Arabian
platform, Rotorbinella thrived along with a species closely related to the genus Orbitokathina, which represents a
further Late Cretaceous 'newcomer'.
The pervasive occurrence of Rotorbinella in the Cenomanian, late early Turonian, as well as in the rest of Late
Cretaceous represents a key aspect that highlight the fundamental role of such a basic morphotype as a pioneer for the
recovery and diversification of benthic foraminifera after the most impactful global events, such as the Cenomanian-
Turonian. A pattern comparable with that here observed is also displayed through the end-Cretaceous and Paleogene (KPg)
times.
Iris type:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Evolution; foraminifera; CTB
List of contributors:
Consorti, Lorenzo
Book title:
International Symposium on Foraminifera FORAMS 2023 - Abstracts with Program