

Palaeontologists agree that it's difficult to observe behaviour in fossil specimens that are dead - even extinct - and petrified. One method is to find a modern, living, species that has some similarities to the ancient animal.
That's the strategy adopted by David L. Meyer, University of Cincinnati professor of geology and colleagues as they study a group of ancient shellfish known as brachiopods. Although they resemble clams or other shelled molluscs, brachiopods are more closely related to marine worms. Relatively rare today, brachiopods were a dominant species in Palaeozoic seas.
In the fossil-rich rocks of the Cincinnati region, a group of brachiopods known as strophomenates are found fossilised surrounded by tiny 'moats.' It is believed that the brachiopods themselves made the moats, but it is not certain how they did so. Palaeontologists think the animals needed to open their shells to a gape of more than 45 degrees to make the moats.
Meyer, along with Benjamin Dattilo of Indiana University Purdue University Fort Wayne (a Ph.D. graduate of UC's geology program), and two students went looking for a modern analogue to the Palaeozoic brachiopods. They found a tiny modern brachiopod named Thecidellina meyeri in the waters off Curacao in the southern Caribbean.
'It's a reasonably good analogue,' Meyer said. 'They gape widely, and the internal anatomy shows similar structures.'
Meyer, Dattilo, and UC students Tanya Del Valle and Christine Rahtz collected a fragment of coral covered with more than 30 Thecidellina specimens, and placed it in a tank with running seawater in the lab in Curacao.
'They rapidly recovered,' Meyer said, 'resumed normal feeding behaviours, and maintained a 90-degree gape.'
With video cameras recording, the palaeontologists measured the ability of the modern brachiopods to move water around, generating relatively sluggish feeding currents and relatively strong currents when they snapped their shells shut.
Sometimes, the brachiopods would snap shut, stay shut, and then slowly open. At other times, they would open partially and shut several times in rapid succession.
The behaviour of the modern animals provides a clue to ancient behaviours.
'By analogy,' Meyer said, 'feeding currents of the ancient brachiopods were too weak to disturb sediments, allowing them to feed close to the sea floor.'
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