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Gregarious behaviour in Carboniferous cyclidan crustaceans
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2025-03-19
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2024-12-31
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Cyclida
gregarious behaviour
Bear Gulch
carboniferous
behaviour
palaeontology
gregarious behaviour
Bear Gulch
carboniferous
behaviour
palaeontology
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Abstract
Gregarious behaviours in modern and fossil arthropods are commonly associated with defensive strategies, mass moulting and synchronous reproduction. Such behaviour is scarcely documented in the crustacean fossil record. Identifying clusters in extinct Pancrustacea is, therefore, important for understanding the evolutionary history and origin of crustacean gregariousness. Cyclida, an order of extinct, enigmatic pancrustaceans that have been subject to limited palaeoecological examination, represents an ideal group for testing the presence of gregarious behaviour. Here, we report a cluster of 50 <jats:italic>Schramine montanaensis</jats:italic> individuals from the Serpukhovian-aged Bear Gulch Limestone of Montana, USA, expanding the exceptionally rare record of cyclidan aggregations. The presence of articulated specimens with appendages and possible gill preservation supports the interpretation of carcasses that were preserved during a rapid burial event. We propose that this cluster records either a mass moulting event or clustering for shelter, representing one of the oldest records of crustacean gregariousness. These findings provide important insights into cyclidan life modes and ecological interactions in Carboniferous marine environments.
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Bicknell Russell D. C., Klompmaker Adiël A., Edgecombe Gregory D., McCoy Victoria E., Young Andrew, Lauer Bruce, Lauer René and Cuomo Carmela 2025 Gregarious behaviour in Carboniferous cyclidan crustaceans Biol. Lett.2120240734 http://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2024.0734
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Copyright © 2025 The Author(s). Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved. The attached file is the published version of the article.
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1744-9561
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1744-957X