GEOLOGY FORUM, January 2011 e233
REPLY: doi:10.1130/G31765Y.1
Arnaud Brayard
1
, Alexander Nützel
2
, Andrzej Kaim
2, 3
, Gilles
Escarguel
4
, Michael Hautmann
5
, Daniel A. Stephen
6
, Kevin G.
Bylund
7
, Jim Jenks
8
, and Hugo Bucher
5
1
UMR 5561 CNRS Biogéosciences, Université de Bourgogne,
21000 Dijon, France
2
Bayerische Staatssammlung für Paläontologie und Geologie,
80333 Munich, Germany
3
Instytut Paleobiologii PAN, PL-00-818 Warsaw, Poland
4
UMR 5125 CNRS PEPS, Université Lyon 1, 69622 Villeurbanne
Cedex, France
5
Paläontologisches Institut und Museum, Universität Zürich,
8006 Zurich, Switzerland
6
Department of Earth Science, Utah Valley University, Orem, Utah
84058, USA
7
Spanish Fork, Utah 84660, USA
8
West Jordan, Utah 84084, USA
We are pleased that our study prompted Fraiser et al. (2010) to aban-
don their previous concept of a global Early Triassic “Lilliput effect” that
extended from the Griesbachian to at least the Smithian (e.g., Fraiser and
Bottjer, 2004). As far as we know, their view that the Lilliput effect was
restricted to just the first two Early Triassic conodont zones is expressed
in their Comment for the first time. Indeed, Twitchett’s (2007) conclusion
cited in Fraiser et al. (2010) explicitly assumed that “pre-extinction sizes
are not commonly recorded until at least the Middle Triassic” (p. 132).
Additionally, Twitchett concluded that “all animal groups suffered a size
reduction after the Late Permian extinction event” (p. 143), a conclusion
that is contradicted by the well-known normal size of ammonoids. Fur-
thermore, the distinction between a Lilliput phase spanning the earliest
Triassic zones and a subsequent phase spanning the rest of the Early Trias-
sic with still-reduced body size is arbitrary.
Even Twitchett (2007) stated that the Lilliput effect sensu stricto is
not applicable for gastropods at the Permian-Triassic boundary because
boundary-crossers have not yet been reported among gastropod species.
The Lilliput effect sensu lato has been considered by various authors (in-
cluding our opponents; e.g., Twitchett, 2007), based on the comparisons
of size distributions of pre- and post-crisis gastropod faunas (without dis-
crimination of taxa). In this case, it is irrelevant whether newly originated
taxa are included because such comparisons argue on the class and sample
level. On that basis, a small body size was suggested to be typical for Gas-
tropoda during the entire Early Triassic (e.g., Fraiser and Bottjer, 2004).
The dominance of small gastropods is not unique to the Early Trias-
sic; this size class is largely dominant in Recent normal marine faunas
(Bouchet et al., 2002; 71.4% of the species are <19 mm) and most fossil
faunas throughout the Phanerozoic. It is only the apparent lack of very
large gastropods in the Early Triassic which is remarkable. This alleged
small maximum size of Early Triassic gastropods also plays an impor-
tant role in the papers of Fraiser and Bottjer (2004, p. 267) and Twitchett
(2007, his table 1). The discovery of gastropods that are twice as large
(~100 mm) as previously known is relevant. Gastropods with a size of
20–40 mm have repeatedly been reported from Early Triassic faunas, in-
cluding the Griesbachian (Brayard et al., 2010), not only in high latitudes
(as argued by Fraiser et al., 2010) but also in low latitudes (37-mm-wide
Naticopsis from Oman, a large size for gastropods; only ~10% of Bouchet
et al.’s [2002] species show adult size >37 mm).
The largest known gastropod ever (Syrinx aruanus) mentioned by
Fraiser et al. (2010) is a recent neogastropod, a group originating in the
Cretaceous and whose members reach large sizes. Such gastropods were
not present in the Early Mesozoic. Using Syrinx as a reference, the vast
majority of Phanerozoic gastropod faunas would fall into the Lilliput cat-
egory. Moreover, the absence of “giant” taxa in the Early Triassic fos-
sil record may well be a preservation artifact due to the generally poorly
documented fossil record of that time interval.
The reported maximum sizes of Permian (but not Late Permian) and
Middle Triassic gastropods does exceed that of Early Triassic gastropods,
but this might be a purely stochastic effect due to the rather low Early
Triassic species diversity (<100 species known) and specimen abundance.
Usually, log-normal size distributions are highly right-skewed, making
larger species much rarer than smaller ones (independent of species’ rela-
tive abundance, negatively correlated with body size). We ran sub-sam-
pling Monte Carlo analyses of Bouchet et al.’s (2002) size distribution of
2581 extant mollusc species based on random generation of sets of 100
species (ca. Early Triassic gastropod diversity; 10
6
iterations). Under a
conservative hypothesis of equal sampling probability of each species, the
probability distribution of the largest sampled size class turned out to be:
[41–88 mm] = 13.6%, [89–190 mm] = 62.7%, and >200 mm = 23.7%,
clearly compatible with the largest Early Triassic gastropods found by us.
Concerning our sampling strategy, we carefully sampled, bed by bed,
several sections representing ~80 m of well-calibrated Smithian strata. It
is trivial that any type of surface collection method is biased because small
species are underrepresented. The purpose of our paper was not to esti-
mate the full size distribution, but rather to document large gastropods
and to correct the underestimated maximum shell size of Early Triassic
gastropods. Our previous and new collections yielded several hundred
gastropods (much more than most previously published assemblage); the
largest is 103 mm high.
Incidentally, the 27200 cm
3
bulk samples mentioned by our critics
is not impressive; it corresponds to a 2.72-cm-thick layer covering 1 m
2
,
probably not really representative for 120 m of strata from 3750 km
2
as
indicated by them. The sampling method of Fraiser and Bottjer (2004)
was obviously also biased because they failed to find large gastropods
although they worked in the same area as we did. Some of their material
is derived from high-energy deposits (e.g., tempestites) and is size-sorted.
We do not exclude that size reduction affected some Early Triassic clades,
e.g., in heterodont bivalves (see Hautmann and Nützel, 2005). However,
previous claims that the Lilliput effect sensu lato was a global phenom-
enon during the entire Early Triassic that influenced all animal groups
(Twitchett, 2007) are unconvincing: the importance of the Lilliput effect
on Early Triassic faunas, if any, has been clearly overestimated.
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