@phdthesis{DelveneIbarrola2000, author = {Delvene Ibarrola, Graciela}, title = {Middle and Upper Jurassic bivalves from the Iberian Range (Spain)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-3119}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2000}, abstract = {Previous work on Jurassic bivalves from the Iberian Range is reviewed, whereby emphasis is placed on Callovian-Kimmeridgian species. The taxonomy, distribution pattern and ecology of the bivalve fauna occurring in Middle and Upper Jurassic rocks of the Aragonian Branch of the Iberian Range have been analysed. For this purpose 14 sections and 5 additional outcrops, selected according to the abundance of bivalves, were measured in detail and sampled. The rocks studied belong to the Chelva, Y{\´a}tova, Sot de Chera and Loriguilla formations of Callovian-Kimmeridgian age. The distribution of species of bivalves is given for each section. More than 3000 specimens of bivalves representing 83 species that belong to 46 genera and subgenera of the subclasses Palaeotaxodonta, Pteriomorphia, Isofilibranchia. Palaeoheterodonta, Heterodonta and Anomaldesmata have been used for the taxonomic analysis. One species is new: Plagiostoma fuersichi from the Callovian of the Chelva Fm. The autecology (trophic group and life habit) of each bivalve has been discussed. 49 samples of four sections habe been selected for a quantitative palaeoecological analysis of the bivalve fraction of the benthic fauna. Five bivalve associations and two assemblages are recognised by a Q-mode hierarchical cluster analysis (Ward method). The main environmental factors controlling bivalve associations are thought to be substrate, water energy and distribution of organic matter. The bivalves exhibit a distinct spatial and temporal distribution pattern within the Aragonian Branch. Four of the bivalve associations occur in the Upper Oxfordian (Sot de Chera Fm) and one association in the Lower Callovian (Chelva Fm). In the Sot de Chera and Loriguilla formations, the abundance of bivalves decreases from NW to SE i.e., from relatively close to the shore line towards the distal-most part of the carbonate platform. In the Chelva Fm. bivalves are abundant in the Ari{\~n}o region, interpreted as a palaeogeographic high. The distribution of bivalves might have been largely controlled by the availability of nutrients.}, subject = {Keltiberisches Gebirge}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Tomašovych2006, author = {Tomašov{\´y}ch, Adam}, title = {Differential effects of environmental factors on ecology of brachiopods and bivalves during the Late Triassic and Jurassic}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-19131}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The aim of this study was to assess distribution patterns of articulate brachiopods during the Mesozoic. Exploratory and confirmatory multivariate analyses in this study evaluate whether environmental preferences of brachiopods and bivalves are substantially distinct and whether structure of their communities significantly differ. Specifically, the hypothesis being tested is that differential abundances of Mesozoic brachiopods and bivalves are not related to varying substrate properties only, but also to varying food supply, turbidity and oxygen levels. This hypothesis was evaluated with quantitative data gathered in various field areas and time intervals. They include the Upper Triassic deposits of the West Carpathians and Eastern Alps, the Lower and Middle Jurassic deposits of Morocco, the Middle and Upper Jurassic deposits of the West Carpathians, the Upper Jurassic deposits of the Franconian and Swabian Alb, and the Upper Jurassic deposits of the Swiss Jura. The main conclusion is that brachiopod-dominated communities are characterized by a unique guild structure, with dominance of trophic groups with low metabolic requirements or adapted to nutrient-poor or oxygen-poor conditions. For example, brachiopod co-occured more commonly with epifaunal than with infaunal bivalves in soft-bottom environments. Abundances of brachiopods correlate mostly negatively with increasing proportions of terrigenous admixture (i.e., with increasing amount of land-derived nutrient supply and turbidity).}, subject = {Fossile Armf{\"u}ßer}, language = {en} }