日本地球惑星科学連合2024年大会

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[E] ポスター発表

セッション記号 B (地球生命科学) » B-CG 地球生命科学複合領域・一般

[B-CG05] Frontier in diversity and ecology of protists and microfossils

2024年5月31日(金) 17:15 〜 18:45 ポスター会場 (幕張メッセ国際展示場 6ホール)

コンビーナ:堀 利栄(愛媛大学大学院理工学研究科 地球進化学)、氏家 由利香(高知大学)、仲村 康秀(島根大学エスチュアリー研究センター)、Baumgartner Oliver Baumgartner(University of Lausanne)


17:15 〜 18:45

[BCG05-P05] Characteristics on Cretaceous radiolarian fauna and shell structure from a high-latitudinal area

河野 駿輝2、*堀 利栄1、Hollis Christopher3 (1.愛媛大学大学院理工学研究科 地球進化学、2.愛媛大学大学院理工学研究科 自然科学基盤プログラム、3.Victoria University of Wellington, NZ)

キーワード:放散虫、白亜紀、高緯度、サナウラ・ブロエリ

High-latitude radiolarians have been shown to differ in assemblage composition and shell morphology between low and high latitudes based on studies of radiolarian fossils from Cretaceous strata which had been previously studied mostly in samples from the Northern Hemisphere (ex. Empson-Morin 1984), and there are fewer documents of radiolarian fossils from sedimentary rocks on land in the Southern Hemisphere. In order to clarify the differences in shell morphology between latitudes, this study compared the radiolarian fauna from pelagic sedimentary rocks in Cape Palliser, North Island, New Zealand, which is possibly considered to represent the relatively higher latitudes of the Mesozoic Cretaceous strata in the Southern Hemisphere based on geologic constrains (ex. Mortimer 2019), with those from the lower latitudes in Paleo-Pacific. The age of radiolarian fossils obtained from the Cape Palliser is considered as early Cretaceous (Aptian?) however, it is not yet fixed because of numerous unidentified species. We focused on differences in shell morphology among latitudinal zones based on measurements of shell thickness and size. Thanarla brouweri, which a cosmopolitan Cretaceous index species. We examined shell size and thickness of T. brouweri from the Cape Palliser sample and compared with those of species obtained from the low latitudinal areas. Based on these studies, the following results are obtained, 1) high-latitude individuals have thicker shells than low-latitude individuals, 2) high-latitude individuals often have larger shells than low-latitude individuals, and 3) low-latitude fauna have small individual differences in shell size, while high-latitude one have significant individual differences in shell size. These results are inferred to be general feature between low-latitude radiolarian species and high-latitude ones among nassellarian shells.