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      Palaeoecology and evolution of marine hard substrate communities

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      Earth-Science Reviews
      Elsevier BV

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          RECRUITMENT AND THE LOCAL DYNAMICS OF OPEN MARINE POPULATIONS

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            The Mesozoic marine revolution: evidence from snails, predators and grazers

            Tertiary and Recent marine gastropods include in their ranks a complement of mechanically sturdy forms unknown in earlier epochs. Open coiling, planispiral coiling, and umbilici detract from shell sturdiness, and were commoner among Paleozoic and Early Mesozoic gastropods than among younger forms. Strong external sculpture, narrow elongate apertures, and apertural dentition promote resistance to crushing predation and are primarily associated with post-Jurassic mesogastropods, neogastropods, and neritaceans. The ability to remodel the interior of the shell, developed primarily in gastropods with a non-nacreous shell structure, has contributed greatly to the acquisition of these antipredatory features.
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              Recruitment dynamics in complex life cycles.

              Organisms living in the marine rocky intertidal zone compete for space. This, together with predation, physical disruption, and differing species tolerances to physiological stress, explains the structure of the ecological communities at some sites. At other sites the supply of larvae is limiting, and events in the offshore waters, such as wind-driven upwelling, explain the composition of intertidal communities. Whether the community ecology at a site is governed by adult-adult interactions within the site, or by limitations to the supply of larvae reaching the site, is determined by the regional pattern of circulation in the coastal waters. Models combining larval circulation with adult interactions can potentially forecast population fluctuations. These findings illustrate how processes in different ecological habitats are coupled.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Earth-Science Reviews
                Earth-Science Reviews
                Elsevier BV
                00128252
                July 2003
                July 2003
                : 62
                : 1-2
                : 1-103
                Article
                10.1016/S0012-8252(02)00131-9
                3ddde2a4-0793-43cf-b820-b6c021d5d33d
                © 2003

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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