Stijn Goolaerts, Christian Burlet, Pierre Gueriau, Aurore Mathys, Sebastian Schoeder, Mathieu Thoury, and Bernard Mottequin (2024)
To colour or not to colour: colour patterns and pigments in invertebrates from the Palaeozoic of Belgium
In: The Benelux Congress of Zoology 2024 ("Zoology 2024") Celenbrating biodiversity between land and sea, Conference Booklet, December 12-13, 2024, University of Mons, Mons, Belgium, ed. by Denis Michez & Jérôme Delroisse, pp. 54.
Almost nothing is known about the evolution of shell colour in invertebrates. This is largely due to the
ultra-rarity of fossils in which colour patterns and pigments are preserved and immediately visible, and
therefore easy to identify, especially when these are hundreds of millions of years old. This hampers
our understanding of the role and function of colour in extinct animals, their ecology, mode of life,
interactions, development, and evolution. A good example for this ultra-rarity is the Palaeozoic of
Belgium, world-renowned for its exquisitely preserved fossils of the Devonian and Carboniferous,
enabling to document major transitions in ecosystem dynamics and the evolution of life on Earth (e.g.
nekton revolution, terrestrialisation, major climate changes, anoxic events, biodiversity crises) but from
which only a few cephalopod, bivalve and gastropod mollusc and brachiopod shells were historically
documented preserving coloured traces (mostly by L.-G. de Koninck and P. de Ryckholt, mid to late
19th century). However, recently, it was discovered that many more specimens preserve these traces,
in particular those from Tournaisian–Viséan shallow marine reef environments, allowing to investigate
its occurrence in different evolutionary lineages of marine invertebrates exactly during one of the main
periods of revolution in geologic history.
In Brain project B2/P233/P2 nicknamed COLOURINPALAEO financed by Belspo, after gathering all the
specimens available in the main Belgian collections, we use different techniques (multispectral
photogrammetry and spectro-imaging) to better visualise the preserved colour patterns and pigments.
Furthermore, advanced spectroscopic techniques, namely Raman micro-probe spectroscopy,
synchrotron trace elemental mapping and absorption spectroscopy, are used to identify the chemical
signature of the pigments as well as their mode and pathways of preservation. Some of the first results
on this multidisciplinary study on a unique set of Belgian fossils will be presented.
Abstract of an Oral Presentation or a Poster
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