Posts by Deep Time Ecology group
A silly simple pen drawing of a paper-clip-shaped ammonite with eyes like those of Clippy the office assistant. A speech bubble reads "It looks like you're evolving. Would you like help?"
Yes yes yes
Ediacaran fossil surface on the coastline of Newfoundland, Canada
This #FossilFriday I am delighted to share a postdoctoral position that we @deeptimeecology.bsky.social @camzoology.bsky.social are advertising on early animal evolution in the #Ediacaran.
www.cam.ac.uk/jobs/postdoc...
Fantastic time at #BES2025 @britishecologicalsociety.org talking community ecology past and present! From the early animals of the #Ediacaran time period with modern corals and rainforests
New paper alert! 🚨 🐌
We studied historic Antarctic fossils from the Zinsmeister Collection to assess whether the K-Pg extinction, as recorded on Seymour Island, was sudden or gradual. We found that benthic life thrived in the 4 million years before the K-Pg.
doi.org/10.1016/j.pa...
A great talk from Yarong about using Bayesian network analysis to reveal multi-scale community dynamics in the Ediacaran Shibantan Biota. #PalAss2025 @thepalass.bsky.social
A great talk from Yarong about using Bayesian network analysis to reveal multi-scale community dynamics in the Ediacaran Shibantan Biota. #PalAss2025 @thepalass.bsky.social
Brilliant talk from Emily on constraining the lifespan of early animals of the Ediacaran!
#PalAss2025 @thepalass.bsky.social
#PalAss2025 @thepalass.bsky.social
We are at PalAss in Portsmouth! Princess is presenting a poster on Charniodiscus in the Portland Building, Tara on Avalonian community compositions in the Richmond Building, and Emily is giving a talk on constraining lifespans of Ediacaran animals in the Richmond Building LT at 9.30. Exciting day!
We have had a fantastic time at University of Zurich for CPEG 2015 discussing ecology, palaeoecology and conservation palaeobiology. Thanks to the wonderful organisers and looking forward to CPEG 2027 😀
Massive thank you to Victor Bonito and Jone Waitaiti for their work on this paper!
You can read the paper here: link.springer.com/article/10.1...
An example of another filter feeder on the GWW - a gorgonian sea fan
But we also found that multiple filter feeders were found alongside the dominant soft corals, possibly because these filter feeders can feed in between the times when the soft corals feed, which is aligned with periods of high current.
A close up of a Nephtheidae soft coral - you can clearly see sclerites and feeding polyps!
We found that reproduction and habitat were key factors in influencing the soft corals, and that soft corals become more dominant with depth because of reproductive lability, fast growth rates, and increasing suitable habitat associated with filter-feeding.
The view down the amazing Great White Wall reef
We can investigate the ecological processes that influence soft corals by analysing their spatial positions. To understand how depth affected the soft corals, we used our spatial analysis across a depth gradient.
Nephtheidae soft corals in Fiji
We investigate the population ecology of soft corals on the amazing Great White Wall in Fiji. These amazing animals are common on coral reefs, but some of them are resistant to climate change effects meaning they could become more common in the future, so we wanted to know more about their ecology.
🚨NEW PAPER ALERT🚨: Depth affects the population dynamics on a soft coral-dominated reef on the Great White Wall, Fiji 🪸
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Delighted to share our paper in @currentbiology.bsky.social iology.bsky.social with a palaeo-evo-devo perspective on the evolution of symmetry in echinoderms. Led by Steffi Woodgate with Frankie Dunn, @echinerd.bsky.social, @laurentformery.bsky.social & Sam Zamora
www.cell.com/current-biol...-5
Deep Time Ecology members presenting at #progpal2025 in Edinburgh. @shujie.bsky.social ’s poster on competition in Ediacaran communities, @princessairab.bsky.social ’s talk on Charniodiscus and @yarongliu.bsky.social ’s talk on trace fossils
New paper alert!!
With @pettorelli.bsky.social and Regan Early
We asked whether social media records could be used to study species distributions - and it turns out they can!
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Congratulations to @princessairab.bsky.social for winning a Presidents talk Prize 🥳
Go check out @nis38.bsky.social ‘s poster on secondary succession in the Avalon Ediacaran at #PalAss24!
Fantastic talk today by @ming-tfk27.bsky.social talking about ecological complexity in the run up to the K-Pg extinction in Seymour Island
Next up is @philvixseboxse.bsky.social former DTE member talking about his PhD work @cambridge-earthsci.bsky.social with Alex Liu and colleagues
Next up from DTE is Euan Furness talking about his work considering ecosystem stability over the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition
Super excited to kick off this post coffee session with @princessairab.bsky.social talking about her work on the #Ediacaran fossils
The Deep Time Ecology Group have several talks at #PalAss24!
Starting us off early in the morning on Day 1: In Session 2A, at Großer Saal at 11:00, @princessairab.bsky.social will be talking about the "Morphometric analyses of Charniodiscus from the Ediacaran of Newfoundland, Canada."
The Deep Time Ecology Group have several talks at #PalAss24! @ming-tfk27.bsky.social will be speaking on Day 2: Session 6B at 14:30 at the Kleiner Saal, about "Metacommunity structural changes of Antarctic invertebrates over the latest Maastrichtian".