The northern Adriatic Sea is transient, most recently flooded
between 18,000 to 6,000 years ago following the last glacial
maximum, and it will drain again with the onset of the next glacial
period. Despite its youth, uniformly shallow depth, and flat
sediment floor, it hosts a broad range of bottom-dwelling sea life
ecologically resembling communities that have existed in the
shallow sea since the Ordovician Period, some 500 million years
ago.
The northern Adriatic is a natural laboratory in which to test
hypotheses concerning the shift from the Paleozoic prevalence of
stationary suspension-feeders living on the surface of the sediment
and feeding from the overlying waters to, more recently,
bottom-dwelling animals living dominantly in or actively seeking
temporary refuge within the sediments of the sea floor, regardless
of where they feed. Across the northern Adriatic Sea there is an
ecological gradient from Paleozoic-style surface-dwelling
communities in the east to "modern" communities living almost
exclusively within the sediments in the west. Therefore, within the
relatively small area of the northern Adriatic, there is an
existing gradient similar to the profound ecological change from
Paleozoic to more modern marine life.
During the early twentieth century, life at the bottom of the
Adriatic was systematically sampled from the east to the west
coasts, revealing the most common animals and their distribution.
In this book Frank K. McKinney combines these findings with more
recent, local studies to understand better the ecological structure
of the Adriatic's floor. Specifically, he uses the predation,
sediment textures and deposition rates, currents, and nutrients of
northern Adriatic bottom communities to evaluate hypotheses
concerning the conditions that drove surface-dwelling animals to
seek long-term refuge within sea floor sediment.
Though the northern Adriatic has been well studied since the
advent of the marine sciences, it is not widely known by
paleontologists. With this volume, McKinney illuminates what this
"living laboratory" can tell us about the evolution of
multicellular life on Earth.
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