New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Description and interpretation of a fossil beetle assemblage from marine
isotope stage 6 from Banks Peninsula, New Zealand
M. J. Marra
Department of Geological Sciences
University of Canterbury
Private Bag 4800
Christchurch, New Zealand
email: maureen.marra@canterbury.ac.nz
Abstract A penultimate glaciation-age beetle fauna is
described from a core record from Banks Peninsula, South Island, New Zealand.
A total of 19 beetle species belonging to 5 families was recorded. The fossil
beetles indicate a forest environment of montane affinity but in a coastal
setting. The assemblage is dominated by phytophagous species, mainly weevils,
associated with forest habitats. The beetle fauna includes Rhicnobelus
metallicus, which is a forest canopy species; forest floor and swamp
forest taxa; and Cecyropa modesta, which is specific to coastal dune
systems. Fossil seeds were also identified. They include species from salt
marsh and tidal flats, indicating an estuarine setting, which suggests that
the beetle remains were washed into an estuary from an adjacent forest. The
fossil beetle assemblage indicates cooler than modern conditions but not
full glacial. This interpretation is consistent with the regional pollen
record for this interval.
Keywords fossil beetles; paleoclimate; environmental
reconstruction; paleoecology; penultimate glaciation
G02036; Received 12 July 2002; accepted 28 July 2003; online publication
date 13 November 2003
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 2003, Vol. 46: 523-528
0028-8306/03/4604-0523 $7.00/0 © The Royal Society of New Zealand
2003
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