2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2008.11.002
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Paleobiogeographical implications of inner bay Ostracoda during the Late Pleistocene Shimosueyoshi transgression, central Japan, with significance of its migration and disappearance in eastern Asia

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Cited by 31 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…This is because (i) longer time scales should include more extinctions and speciations; (ii) alpha (local) diversity may better reflect species coexistence, but beta, gamma, and latitudinally binned diversities reflect regional-scale diversity largely formed by the long-term dynamics of extinction and speciation; (iii) coastal taxa are influenced to a greater extent by geological time-scale events (e.g. sea-level changes, plate tectonics) (Renema et al, 2008;Irizuki et al, 2009) because of their narrow distribution along (often complex) coastlines in which isolation of local communities is easily induced by geological events. However, evolutionary dynamics may be less important in shaping present-day oceanic and deep-sea alpha diversity patterns.…”
Section: Potential Controlling Factors Of Deep-sea Biodiversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is because (i) longer time scales should include more extinctions and speciations; (ii) alpha (local) diversity may better reflect species coexistence, but beta, gamma, and latitudinally binned diversities reflect regional-scale diversity largely formed by the long-term dynamics of extinction and speciation; (iii) coastal taxa are influenced to a greater extent by geological time-scale events (e.g. sea-level changes, plate tectonics) (Renema et al, 2008;Irizuki et al, 2009) because of their narrow distribution along (often complex) coastlines in which isolation of local communities is easily induced by geological events. However, evolutionary dynamics may be less important in shaping present-day oceanic and deep-sea alpha diversity patterns.…”
Section: Potential Controlling Factors Of Deep-sea Biodiversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Japan, clay material used for pottery manufacture, often contains ≤0.05 mass% of manganese (i.e., ≤0.065 mass% of MnO) . Generally, prehistorical potteries from the Kanto, Chubu, and Tohoku regions of Japan were mainly produced using the clay layer from the Shimosueyoshi terrace . The clay has ≤0.05 mass% of manganese concentration.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of these dominant genera inhabit inner-shelf areas of the modern Japan Sea and Northwest Pacific (e.g. Ikeya and Cronin, 1993;Zhou, 1995;Kamiya et al, 2001;Ozawa and Kamiya, 2001;Ozawa, 2003Ozawa, , 2010Tanaka, 2008;Irizuki et al, 2009). Individuals of species in these genera accounted for approximately 80% of ostracod specimens in this assemblage, which was characterized by a high number of species and absolute abundance in sandy sediments, and a species diversity index of approximately 3 (Tables 1, 2, 4).…”
Section: Ostracod Assemblagementioning
confidence: 97%
“…Hemicythere kitanipponica (Tabuki, 1986 and muddy sediments around the Japanese Islands (Frydl, 1982;Ikeya and Itoh, 1991;Kamiya et al, 2001;Ozawa, 2003;Tanaka, 2008;Irizuki et al, 2009). Species in the genera Krithe, Propontocypris?, Cytherella, Falsobuntonia, Acanthocythereis, Robertsonites, and Palmenella are commonly or rarely found from several horizons ( Figure 5; Tables 1, 2).…”
Section: Occurrence Of Ostracodmentioning
confidence: 99%