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dc.contributor.author Greb S.F.
dc.contributor.author DiMichele W.A.
dc.contributor.author Gastaldo R.A.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-03-22T08:33:49Z
dc.date.available 2025-03-22T08:33:49Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=22244547
dc.identifier.citation Special Paper of the Geological Society of America, 2006, 399, 399. С, 1-40
dc.identifier.issn 0072-1077
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/48644
dc.description.abstract The fossil record of wetlands documents unique and long-persistent fl oras and faunas with wetland habitats spawning or at least preserving novel evolutionary characteristics and, at other times, acting as refugia. In addition, there has been an evolution of wetland types since their appearance in the Paleozoic. The fi rst land plants, beginning in the Late Ordovician or Early Silurian, were obligate dwellers of wet substrates. As land plants evolved and diversifi ed, different wetland types began to appear. The fi rst marshes developed in the mid-Devonian, and forest swamps originated in the Late Devonian. Adaptations to low-oxygen, low-nutrient conditions allowed for the evolution of fens (peat marshes) and forest mires (peat forests) in the Late Devonian. The differentiation of wetland habitats created varied niches that infl uenced the terrestrialization of arthropods in the Silurian and the terrestrialization of tetrapods in the Devonian (and later), and dramatically altered the way sedimentological, hydrological, and various biogeochemical cycles operated globally. Widespread peatlands evolved in the Carboniferous, with the earliest ombrotrophic tropical mires arising by the early Late Carboniferous. Carboniferous wetlandplant communities were complex, and although the taxonomic composition of these wetlands was vastly different from those of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, these communities were essentially structurally, and probably dynamically, modern. By the Late Permian, the spread of the Glossopteris fl ora and its adaptations to more temperate or cooler climates allowed the development of mires at higher latitudes, where peats are most common today. Although widespread at the end of the Paleozoic, peat-forming wetlands virtually disappeared following the end-Permian extinction. The initial associations of crocodylomorphs, mammals, and birds with wetlands are well recorded in the Mesozoic. The radiation of Isoetales in the Early Triassic may have included a submerged lifestyle and hence, the expansion of aquatic wetlands. The evolution of heterosporous ferns introduced a fl oating vascular habit to aquatic wetlands. The evolution of angiosperms in the Cretaceous led to further expansion of aquatic species and the fi rst true mangroves. Increasing diversifi cation of angiosperms in the Tertiary led to increased fl oral partitioning in wetlands and a wide variety of specialized wetland subcommunities. During the Tertiary, the spread of grasses, rushes, and sedges into wetlands allowed for the evolution of freshwater and salt-water reed marshes. Additionally, the spread of Sphagnum sp. in the Cenozoic allowed bryophytes, an ancient wetland clade, to dominate high-latitude mires, creating some of the most widespread mires of all time. Recognition of the evolution of wetland types and inherent framework positions and niches of both the fl ora and fauna is critical to understanding both the evolution of wetland functions and food webs and the paleoecology of surrounding ecotones, and is necessary if meaningful analogues are to be made with extant wetland habitats. © 2006 Geological Society of America.
dc.subject BOG
dc.subject COAL
dc.subject EARTH HISTORY
dc.subject FEN
dc.subject MARSH
dc.subject MIRE
dc.subject PALEOBOTANY
dc.subject PALEOECOLOGY
dc.subject PALEOFL ORA
dc.subject SWAMP
dc.subject WETLANDS
dc.subject Cretaceous
dc.subject Triassic
dc.subject Permian
dc.subject Carboniferous
dc.subject Devonian
dc.subject Silurian
dc.subject Ordovician
dc.title EVOLUTION AND IMPORTANCE OF WETLANDS IN EARTH HISTORY
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1130/2006.2399(01)
dc.subject.age Mesozoic::Cretaceous
dc.subject.age Мезозой::Меловая
dc.subject.age Mesozoic::Triassic
dc.subject.age Мезозой::Триасовая
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Permian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Пермская
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Carboniferous
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Каменноугольная
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Devonian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Девонская
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Silurian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Силурийская
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Ordovician
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Ордовикская


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