Kogame, Kazuhiro; Horiguchi, Takeo. Re-discovery of a "living fossil" coccolithophore from the coastal waters of Japan and Croatia // Marine micropaleontology, 116 (2015)
AbstractThe extant coccolithophore Tergestiella adriatica Kamptner, which has never been reported since its original description, was re-discovered from coastal-nearshore waters of Tomari, Tottori, Japan and offshore Rovinj, Croatia. Morphological and molecular phylogenetic studies of T. adriatica revealed that Cyclagelosphaera is a synonym of Tergestiella, and that extant T. adriatica is a direct descendent of the Mesozoic fossil genus Cyclagelosphaera (Watznaueriaceae), which had been thought to go extinct in the Paleogene (54Ma). It is thus a remarkable example of a living fossil. Coastal patchy distribution of living T. adriatica and restricted occurrence of Miocene-Oligocene fossil Cyclagelosphaera in shallow waters, which was recently reported from New Jersey shelf, suggest that Tergestiella/Cyclagelosphaera was constrained to a nearshore environment in the Cenozoic, and this restricted distribution caused the lack of fossil records from oceanic sediments in the last 54 Ma.Floristic study of coccolithophores in coastal and offshore waters of the Tomari area over a six-year period showed that T. adriatica and B. bigelowii occur predictably and synchronously every June. The environmental factors that induced the co-occurrence of these two taxa are unknown, and T. adriatica did not co-occur with B. bigelowii at other sites. Regular occurrence of middle-lower photic zone coccolithophore taxa in Tomari area every autumn suggests the presence of seasonal mixing of the water column in this period.3