Michel Bestmann
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
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Featured researches published by Michel Bestmann.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2018
Bryan Shirley; Madleen Grohganz; Michel Bestmann; Emilia Jarochowska
Conodont elements are the earliest mineralized vertebrate dental tools and the only ones capable of extensive repair. Two models of conodont growth, as well as the presence of a larval stage, have been hypothesized. We analysed normally and pathologically developed elements to test these hypotheses and identified three ontogenetic stages characterized by different anisometric growth and morphology. The distinction of these stages is independently corroborated by differences in tissue strontium (Sr) content. The onset of the last stage is marked by the appearance of wear resulting from mechanical food digestion. At least five episodes of damage and repair could be identified in the normally developed specimen. In the pathological element, function was compromised by the development of abnormal denticles. This development can be reconstructed as addition of new growth centres out of the main growth axis during an episode of renewed growth. Our findings support the model of periodic retraction of elements and addition of new growth centres. Changes in Sr content coincident with distinct morphology and lack of wear in the early life stage indicate that conodonts might have assumed their mature feeding habit of predators or scavengers after an initial larval stage characterized by a different feeding mode.
Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2018
Jan-Filip Päßler; Emilia Jarochowska; Michel Bestmann; Axel Munnecke
Although carbonate-precipitating cyanobacteria are ubiquitous in aquatic ecosystems today, the criteria used to identify them in the geological record are subjective and rarely testable. Differences in the mode of biomineralization between cyanobacteria and eukaryotes, i.e. biologically induced calcification (BIM) vs. biologically controlled calcification (BCM), result in different crystallographic structures which might be used as a criterion to test cyanobacterial affinities. Cyanobacteria are often used as a ‘wastebasket taxon’, to which various microfossils are assigned. The lack of a testable criterion for the identification of cyanobacteria may bias their fossil record severely. We employed electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to investigate the structure of calcareous skeletons in two microproblematica widespread in Palaeozoic marine ecosystems: Rothpletzella, hypothesized to be a cyanobacterium, and an incertae sedis microorganism Allonema. We used a calcareous trilobite shell as a BCM reference. The mineralized structure of Allonema has a simple single-layered structure of acicular crystals perpendicular to the surface of the organism. The c-axes of these crystals are parallel to the elongation and thereby normal to the surface of the organism. EBSD pole figures and misorientation axes distribution reveal a fibre texture around the c-axis with a small degree of variation (up to 30°), indicating a highly ordered structure. A comparable pattern was found in the trilobite shell. This structure allows excluding biologically induced mineralization as the mechanism of shell formation in Allonema. In Rothpletzella, the c-axes of the microcrystalline sheath show a broader clustering compared to Allonema, but still reveal crystals tending to be perpendicular to the surface of the organism. The misorientation axes of adjacent crystals show an approximately random distribution. Rothpletzella also shares morphological similarities with extant cyanobacteria. We propose that the occurrence of a strong misorientation relationship between adjacent crystals with misorientation axes clustering around the c-axis can be used as a proxy for the degree of control exerted by an organism on its mineralized structures. Therefore, precisely constrained distributions of misorientations (misorientation angle and misorientation axis) may be used to identify BCM in otherwise problematic fossils and can be used to ground-truth the cyanobacterial affinities commonly proposed for problematic extinct organisms.
Journal of Structural Geology | 2012
Michel Bestmann; Giorgio Pennacchioni; S. Nielsen; Mathias Göken; H. de Wall
Journal of Structural Geology | 2011
Michel Bestmann; Giorgio Pennacchioni; Gerhard Frank; Mathias Göken; Helga de Wall
Sedimentology | 2013
Gül Sürmelihindi; Cees W. Passchier; Christoph Spötl; Paul Kessener; Michel Bestmann; Dorrit E. Jacob; Orhan N. Baykan
Lithos | 2015
Michel Bestmann; Giorgio Pennacchioni
Journal of Earth System Science | 2011
Manoj K. Pandit; H. de Wall; H Daxberger; Jana Just; Michel Bestmann; Kamal Kant Sharma
Nature Geoscience | 2017
Marco Scambelluri; Giorgio Pennacchioni; Mattia Gilio; Michel Bestmann; Oliver Plümper; Fabrizio Nestola
Lithos | 2017
Alberto Ceccato; Giorgio Pennacchioni; Luca Menegon; Michel Bestmann
Lithos | 2016
Michel Bestmann; Giorgio Pennacchioni; S. Mostefaoui; Mathias Göken; Helga de Wall