INTERPRETATION OF A DEVONIAN ENCRUSTED BRACHIOPOD ASSEMBLAGE: SOLON MEMBER, CEDAR VALLEY FORMATION, IOWA
Both sampling techniques show the same general trend for encruster abundance and valve preference. However, the abundance of brachiopod taxa differs and the coarse samples do not show the average of the ecological patterns observed in the fine-scale samples. Between the fine-scale samples, variations occur in the proportion of encrusted brachiopods and the amount of encrustation within each taxon. Encrustation gradually decreases through time, with the stratigraphically lowest sample having 38% of the brachiopods being encrusted, and the youngest sample showing 24% encrustation. The most common taxa of brachiopods were Independatrypa, Pseudatrypa, and Seratrypa. The most common encruster was Spirorbis (53-71% of the observed encrusters) followed by an encrusting bryozoan (14-23%) and Hederella (8-14%). Brachiopod diversity remains relatively stable through time; however the number of encrusting genera more than doubles from the lowest stratigraphic sample to the third sample. The fourth and youngest sample decreases to an average diversity. Competition among encrusters could account for the trends observed.