GSA Connects 2024 Meeting in Anaheim, California

Paper No. 150-4
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM

CHEILOSTOME BRYOZOAN FOULING OF BRACHYURAN CRABS IN THE PARATETHYS SEA DURING THE LATE BADENIAN (MIDDLE MIOCENE)


KEY Jr., Marcus, Department of Geosciences, Dickinson College, P.O. Box 1773, Carlisle, PA 17013-2896, HYŽNÝ, Matúš, Department of Geology and Palaeontology, Comenius University, Ilkovičova 6, SVK-842 15, Bratislava, 4, Slovakia, ZÁGORŠEK, Kamil, Department of Geography, Technical University of Liberec, Studentská 2, CZ-461 17, Liberec, Czech Republic and DULAI, Alfréd, Department of Palaeontology and Geology, Hungarian Natural History Museum, P.O.B. 137, H-1431, Budapest, Hungary

This study quantifies the fouling rate of a rarely documented occurrence of bryozoan fouling of fossil brachyuran crabs. Over 500 crab fossils were examined from the reef facies of the Rákos Limestone Member of the Leitha Limestone Formation in the quarry at Diósd, Hungary. They were deposited in the upper part of the regional Badenian stage (i.e., lower part of the international Serravallian stage) of the middle Miocene. Nine bryozoan colonies were found encrusting five dorsal carapaces from three different crab species: Panopeus wronai, Dromia neogenica, and Cancer styriacus. The bryozoans were restricted to the exterior surface of the preserved carapaces of the host crabs, so the fouling was potentially syn-vivo. The bryozoan fouling rate was calculated at 5%. The bryozoans were all cheilostome gymnolaemates identified as Puellina innominata, Crassimarginatella sp., Onychocella sp., Microporella? sp., and an unidentified membraniporiform/encrusting grade bryozoan. The low incidence of bryozoan fouled crabs is consistent with other fossil-based bryozoan-crab studies but much lower than similar studies in today’s faunas. This discrepancy was attributed to both preservational bias and differences in carapace size. The bryozoan-crab symbiosis was described as phoretic hitchhiking.