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1 December 2006 A WOOD-FALL ASSOCIATION FROM LATE EOCENE DEEP-WATER SEDIMENTS OF WASHINGTON STATE, USA
STEFFEN KIEL, JAMES L. GOEDERT
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Abstract

Fossil wood fragments and an associated species-rich invertebrate assemblage, analogous to those found on wood falls in the deep sea today, were found in late Eocene deep-water sediments of the Lincoln Creek Formation in Washington State, United States. This assemblage is the earliest known complex deep-sea biologic community based on decaying wood as its primary source of nutrients. The 495 recovered fossils (exclusive of foraminiferans) belong to 21 species; 7 species relied directly on the wood, either by ingesting it or by feeding on xylophagous microbes; these species are also the most abundant. Seven species were predators or scavengers that were most likely attracted by the wood-dependent species. The remaining seven species represent predators, detritus feeders, and suspension feeders that may or may not have had a relation to the wood fall or its fauna. All species had a benthic mode of life, and pseudoplanktonic taxa are absent, indicating that the colonization of the wood began only once it had arrived on the deep-sea floor. The wood-dependent species belong to taxa that fill the same ecologic niche in the deep sea today, indicating that the modern wood-fall ecosystem had evolved at least by late Eocene time. There is no uniformity or specialization of dispersal strategies among the recovered taxa; they rather reflect those of the phylogenetic group to which they belong. The wood-fall assemblage described here shares several families with fossil whale falls and cold seeps but very few species, a condition that can also be observed at modern examples of these ecosystems.

STEFFEN KIEL and JAMES L. GOEDERT "A WOOD-FALL ASSOCIATION FROM LATE EOCENE DEEP-WATER SEDIMENTS OF WASHINGTON STATE, USA," PALAIOS 21(6), 548-556, (1 December 2006). https://doi.org/10.2110/palo.2005.p05-086r
Accepted: 1 May 2006; Published: 1 December 2006
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