An Ordovician Assemblage of Cool Water‐Adapted Paleotropical Ostracods Suggests an Early Psychrosphere
An ostracod assemblage from the Late Ordovician (Katian) Phu Ngu Formation of northern Vietnam, South China paleoplate, yields typical Baltic and Laurentian‐affinity genera together with some endemic forms. Detailed paleontological and sedimentary analysis of the Phu Ngu Formation suggests it was deposited in a deeper marine forearc setting, below storm wave base, but with (at least intermittently) oxygenated sea‐bottom conditions. Taphonomic assessment of the ostracod assemblage suggests it is in situ. The occurrence of globally widespread ostracod genera, including those from paleocontinents that were geographically remote from South China, is difficult to reconcile with the assumed limited dispersal capability of ostracods in shallow‐shelf settings—a characteristic that has often been used to refine Ordovician paleogeographical reconstructions. Here, we present the novel approach of using paleoclimate reconstructions to assess the environmental distributions of Paleozoic ostracod genera. We show that the deep‐marine depositional setting of our documented assemblage, together with general circulation model simulations of Ordovician ocean‐temperatures, suggests an early radiation of benthic ostracods into the deeper, colder, and thermally uniform ocean below the thermocline. The presence of a globally‐distributed psychrospheric (cool and deep marine) ostracod fauna would imply that our understanding of Ordovician ostracod dispersal is incomplete, and future paleobiogeographical studies should try to decouple the signal of shallow‐shelf benthic taxa, often endemic and probably limited by sea temperature, from those that are more cosmopolitan and tolerant of cooler, deeper waters.
Funding
Institut national des sciences de l’Univers
Leverhulme Trust. Grant Numbers: RF-2018-275/4, RPG-2022-233
Evolution of the Cambrian and Ordovician Biodiversification Onset Over Space and Time – ECO-BOOST
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Find out more...Vietnamese project ‘Research and investigation of the scientific value of geological heritage in some newly opened or expanded road sections to contribute to the preservation and promotion of the value of Dong Van Karst Plateau UNESCO Global Geopark’. Grant Number: ĐTCN.HG-04/2023
The Central England NERC Training Alliance 2 (CENTA2)
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...Paleozoic and Mesozoic ocean anoxic events, mass extinctions, recovery and adaptive radiations in Southeast Asia
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Find out more...Recovery from mass extinction and adaptive radiation of Paleozoic and Mesozoic marine biotic community in Southeast Asia
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Find out more...Vietnamese Project ‘Research of the paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental conditions for the Cambrian sedimentary rocks at typical geoheritage sites in North Vietnam’. Grant Number: TNMT.2023.562.12
History
Citation
McGairy, A., Nguyen, P.D., Williams, M., Stocker, C.P., Harvey, T.H.P., Komatsu, T., Wong Hearing, T.W., Miller, C.G., Marcilly, C.M. and Pohl, A. (2025), An Ordovician Assemblage of Cool Water-Adapted Paleotropical Ostracods Suggests an Early Psychrosphere. Island Arc, 34: e70001. https://doi.org/10.1111/iar.70001Author affiliation
College of Science & Engineering Geography, Geology & EnvironmentVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Island ArcVolume
34Issue
1Publisher
Wileyissn
1038-4871eissn
1440-1738Acceptance date
2024-11-21Copyright date
2025Available date
2025-03-03Publisher DOI
Language
enPublisher version
Deposited by
Professor Mark WilliamsDeposit date
2025-03-03Rights Retention Statement
- No