Drilling predation represents the most abundant evidence of predation in the marine fossil record (Klompmaker et al. Reference Klompmaker, Kelley, Chattopadhyay, Clements, Huntley and Kowalewski2019) because drillholes preserved well in prey shells and drillholes are common for at least the late part of the Phanerozoic. Hence, the evolutionary history of drilling predation is well documented based on the long and rich marine fossil record (Hoffman et al. Reference Hoffman, Pisera and Ryszkiewicz1974; Dudley & Vermeij Reference Dudley and Vermeij1978; Dudley & Dudley Reference Dudley and Dudley1980; Vermeij et al. Reference Vermeij, Zipser and Dudley1980; Kitchell et al. Reference Kitchell, Boggs, Kitchell and Rice1981; Allmon et al. Reference Allmon, Nieh and Norris1990; Kowalewski Reference Kowalewski1990; Tull & Böhning-Gaese Reference Tull and Böhning-Gaese1993; Hagadorn & Boyajian Reference Hagadorn and Boyajian1997; Oji et al. Reference Oji, Ogaya and Sato2003; Kelley & Hansen Reference Kelley, Hansen, Kelley, Kowalewski and Hansen2003; Klompmaker Reference Klompmaker2009; White Reference White2009; Gordillo & Archuby Reference Gordillo and Archuby2012; Mallick et al. Reference Mallick, Bardhan, Paul, Mukherjee and Das2013; Martinelli et al. Reference Martinelli, Gordillo and Archuby2013; Paul et al. Reference Paul, Das, Bardhan and Mondal2013; Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Anderson and Allmon2017; Mondal et al. Reference Mondal, Goswami and Bardhan2017; Archuby & Gordillo Reference Archuby and Gordillo2018; Klompmaker et al. Reference Klompmaker, Kelley, Chattopadhyay, Clements, Huntley and Kowalewski2019; Chattopadhyay et al. Reference Chattopadhyay, Kella and Chttopadhyay2020; Klompmaker & Kittle Reference Klompmaker and Kittle2021) to the point that large, global analyses of different aspects of predation have become possible. For example, Huntley & Kowalewski (Reference Huntley and Kowalewski2007) found a positive correlation between predation intensity and marine diversity and Klompmaker et al. (Reference Klompmaker, Kowalewski, Huntley and Finnegan2017) found that predators, as inferred from drillhole size, became larger relative to their prey throughout the Phanerozoic.
However, palaeontological data are heavily biased toward data from Europe and North America (Raja et al. Reference Raja, Dunne, Matiwane, Khan, Nätscher, Ghilardi and Chattopadhyay2021), which may distort the true global signal. Thus, more studies from other continents are more than welcome (Kojumdjieva Reference Kojumdjieva1974). Taiwan is underrepresented, even in Asia, for predation studies (Klompmaker et al. Reference Klompmaker, Kelley, Chattopadhyay, Clements, Huntley and Kowalewski2019, Fig. 3). Hayasaka & Hayaska (Reference Hayasaka and Hayasaka1960, p. 31, Fig. 15) illustrated a fossil gastropod shell Cerithium kochi, which is now revised as Rhinoclavis kochi (Philippi, 1848) (https://www.molluscabase.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=139068 on 18 December 2022), with evidence of one drillhole from Taiwan. Subsequently, a few studies (Wang Reference Wang1984; Chen et al. Reference Chen, Wu, Huang and Masuda1991; Hu & Tao Reference Hu, Tao and Hu1991) mentioned drilling predation, but there is only one thesis on predator–prey interactions in Taiwan, using molluscan fossils from the Holocene Tainan Formation (Ji Reference Ji1998). The molluscan faunas from the Pleistocene Szekou Formation are well documented (Wang Reference Wang1984; Chen et al. Reference Chen, Wu, Huang and Masuda1991; Hu & Tao Reference Hu, Tao and Hu1991), but drillholes in molluscan shells did not receive attention until now. The current work represents a quantitative study focusing on the predator–prey interactions exemplified by drillholes based on Taiwanese material.
1. Regional geology
The study area (22°00′49″N; 120°42′54″E) is located in the Hengchun Peninsula, the southernmost tip of Taiwan (Fig. 1a–c). Because of arc–continent collision, Hengchun is part of the accretionary prism bounded by a series of thrust faults. Fossiliferous marine successions are exposed in the western Hengchun tableland, Hengchun Peninsula bounded by the Hengchun Fault (Chen Reference Chen and Chen2016). Local stratigraphic units are summarised in Chen & Lee (Reference Chen and Lee1990).
The studied fossils are recovered from the Szekou Formation, a Late Pleistocene unit composed of brownish sandy mudstone, underlying the Hengchun Limestone and overlain by the Taiping Red Bed (Chen Reference Chen and Chen2016) (see Taiping Fm. in Fig. 2). The depositional environment of the Szekou Formation was a lagoonal setting enclosed by barrier islands represented by the Wanlitong Limestone (Chen et al. Reference Chen, Lee, Huang, Yen, Yang, Yang, Chen and Sung2005). Chen et al. (Reference Chen, Wu, Huang and Masuda1991) identified the following faunal assemblages from the Szekou Formation: Eucrassatella–Venus assemblage; Conus–Fissidentalium assemblage; Modiolus assemblage; Cultellus–Solecurtus assemblage; Pinna–Turritella (PT) assemblage; Crassostrea assemblage; and Batillaria–Cyclina assemblage. According to the current study, three faunal assemblages are present in the studied area. The studied fauna belongs to the PT assemblage, which occurs near the upper part of the succession (Fig. 2).
2. Material and methods
2.1 Material
The current study is based on a single bulk sample, implying randomness of shells collected. Bulk sediments (5.24 kg) were taken from the fossil site (Fig. 2). Shells were sieved out of the sediments with a mesh size of 3 × 3 mm and recorded (n = 1489) (Table 1). Among all mollusc shells (n = 1462), there are 1280 gastropods, 168 bivalves and 14 scaphopods in the studied bulk sample. We studied drilling intensities (DIs in Table 1) in skeletal elements such as gastropods, bivalves and scaphopods separately, and subsequently focused our more detailed analyses on the most abundant species, the gastropod Turritella cingulifera Sowerby Reference Sowerby1825 (=Turritella filiola Yokoyama Reference Yokoyama1928); see Section 2.4). The general morphology and the number of whorls of this species are illustrated (Fig. 3a). Examples of one drillhole and multiple drillholes are included (Fig. 3b–e). Variations of drillhole shapes are documented (Fig. 4a1–c2). Measurements were made using digital images in the freeware program ImageJ. Results are visually summarised (Figs 5a–c; 6a–d). Potential predators responsible for the parabolic drillholes are illustrated (Fig. 7). Studied and figured specimens are deposited at the Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University (NTUG). Original measurements are included as supplementary material (Appendix 1) available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755691023000130.
RF, relative frequency (equation 1 in Section 2.2); DI, drilling intensity (equation 2 in Section 2.2); CD, number of complete drillholes. Inc., number of incomplete drillholes; Tot., total number of drillholes; Mult., number of drillholes in multiply bored specimens; PE, prey effectiveness (=Inc./Tot.); MULT, Mult./Tot.
1 The equation used for Bivalvia is different (equation 3 in Section 2.2).
2.2 Equations
To calculate the relative frequency (RF) of taxa in the current study, the following equation is used here:
where:
n = the number of specific fossil remains present in the sample; and
N = the total number of skeletal fossils present in the sample.
To calculate drilling intensity (DI) for gastropods, the following equation is used here:
where:
Nd = the number of drilled specimens; and
N = the total number of specimens.
To calculate DI for bivalves, the following equation (see Kowalewski Reference Kowalewski2002) is adopted here:
where:
Ndv = number of valves with a complete drillhole; and
Nv = the total number of valves.
2.3 Charts and statistics
Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests for normality yielded values consistent with the distributions of values of shell length and drillhole diameter being a poor fit to a normal distribution at the P < 0.01 level. Therefore, we used non-parametric statistical tests, including Spearman's rank correlation coefficient, Kruskal–Wallis (K-W) tests and Mann–Whitney (M-W) tests. PAST version 4.10 was used, also for data visualisations (Fig. 5a−c).
2.4 Taxonomic issue
Taxonomic identifications are based on the work by Hu & Tao (Reference Hu, Tao and Hu1991). However, many molluscan species’ assignments have been revised since. For instance, the taxonomic status of the turritelline gastropod Turritella filiola Yokoyama Reference Yokoyama1928, has been reviewed and revised several times. Robba et al. (Reference Robba, Geronimo, Chaimanee, Negri and Sanfilippo2007, pp. 25–26) synonymised the Pliocene occurrence of T. filiola in Taiwan with Haustator (Kurosioia) cingulifera (Sowerby Reference Sowerby1825). According to the World Register of Marine Species, however, this species is not recognised as a valid species of Haustator (https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=754400). Thus, the taxonomic status of T. filiola is revised as Turritella cingulifera Sowerby Reference Sowerby1825, based on the MolluscaBase (https://molluscabase.org). Furthermore, valid species of Taiwanese fossil molluscs recognised by MolluscaBase are reported here.
2.5 Shell completeness
True shell completeness with the presence of the protoconch is rare in adult gastropods. Johnson et al. (Reference Johnson, Anderson and Allmon2017) reported that only one out of 100 specimens of Turritella bacillum Kiener Reference Kiener1843, collected from Hong Kong is preserved with a protoconch. ‘Complete or nearly complete’ specimens here are shells with either or both partially broken aperture and/or apical part as defined in Mallick et al. (Reference Mallick, Bardhan, Paul, Mukherjee and Das2013). Roy et al. (Reference Roy, Miller and Labarbera1994) showed that drilled bivalve shells are significantly weaker than undrilled shells under point-load compression experimental conditions, but Dyer et al. (Reference Dyer, Ellis, Molinaro and Leighton2018) found no difference in DI during compression experiments using gastropods. The current study focuses on the effect of drilling predation based on complete or nearly complete samples, and fragmentary remains within the bulk sample will be utilised in a future study.
2.6 Terminology
Standard terminology used for studying prey–predator interactions as defined in Kelley et al. (Reference Kelley, Hansen, Graham and Huntoon2001) are adopted here. In particular, prey effectiveness is defined as ‘the ratio of incomplete drillholes in a sample to total number of attempted holes,’ and multiply drilled specimens of all drillholes (MULT) is defined as ‘the number of drillholes that occurred in multiply bored specimens divided by the total number of attempted drillholes' (Kelley et al. Reference Kelley, Hansen, Graham and Huntoon2001, pp. 167–68).
3. Results
3.1 Drilling intensity
The overall bulk sample yielded 1489 skeletal fragments and shells, including 1280 gastropods, 168 bivalves, 14 scaphopods, 23 scleractinian coral fragments, three bryozoan fragments and one echinoid test. Among all molluscan shells, 87.6% (1280/1462) are gastropods, 11.5% represent bivalves and 1% are scaphopods (Table 1). DIs are 0.46, 0.06, and 0.00 for gastropods, bivalves and scaphopods, respectively (DI in Table 1).
Among all gastropods, T. cingulifera is the most abundant gastropod taxon in the studied sample (64.4%, 824/1280). Overall DI for T. cingulifera is 0.413. Among T. cingulifera specimens, complete to nearly complete shells (see Section 2.5) (n = 588) were analysed further (Fig. 5a, b), and its DI is 0.371 (218/588).
3.2 Drillhole types
Two basic types of drillhole shapes were observed in the current study: cylindrical drillholes ( = ichnospecies Oichnus simplex Bromley Reference Bromley1981) (Fig. 4a1, a2); and parabolic drillholes ( = Oichnus paraboloides Bromley Reference Bromley1981) (Fig. 4b1, b2). Oval holes ( = O. ovalis Bromley Reference Bromley1993; see Archuby & Gordillo Reference Archuby and Gordillo2018; Klompmaker & Kittle Reference Klompmaker and Kittle2021) are not observed. One incomplete drillhole is documented herein (Fig. 4c1, c2). Only parabolic drillholes of O. paraboloides are recognised on specimens of T. cingulifera.
3.3 Multiply drilled specimens
For complete to nearly complete specimens (n = 588) of T. cingulifera, the number of complete drillholes is 273. The number of holes on multiply drilled specimens is 95. Prey effectiveness (PE in Table 1) is 0.004. Among all drillholes counted, MULT is 0.347 (95/274) (Table 1). Distributions of T. cingulifera without drillholes, one drillhole and multiple drillholes are illustrated (Fig. 5b). Drillholes occur in all shell length bins. The results of K-W tests indicate that there is no significant difference (P = 0.17) for shell length among specimens with different numbers of drillholes.
3.4 Site stereotypy
Among shells with a single drillhole, holes are found in a range of places on the shell from whorl 1 to whorl 7. Whorl 4 is drilled with the highest frequency (72), with the adjacent whorl 3 location also having a high incidence of drillholes (61). In the sample of shells with multiple drillholes, whorls 2 and 3 were tied at 25 drillholes each (Fig. 5c). Furthermore, specimens with one drillhole on the suture are fairly uncommon (11.2%, 20/178). They appear as two small openings above and below the suture (Fig. 3b). The only incomplete drillhole is found on the suture of a shell (Fig. 4c1, c2).
3.5 Size selectivity
Considering only the complete or near-complete specimens (n = 588), T. cingulifera shells range from 4.7 to 22.6 mm in length. More than 80% of drillholes (181 out of 218) occur in the range from 6.5 mm to 17.2 mm (Fig. 5b) in shell length. Shell length and drillhole size are plotted and analysed further (Fig. 6a–d). For the specimens with a single drillhole, the size ranges from 5.4 to 21.3 mm and the size ranges from 4.7 to 20.0 mm for holes on shells with multiple drillholes (Fig. 6b). The results of Kruskal-Wallis tests indicated that there is no significant difference (P = 0.17) for shell length among specimens with different numbers of drillholes.
3.6 Hole size versus shell length
For specimens with one drillhole (n = 178), hole size ranges from 0.2 to 2.6 mm with a mean of 1.0 mm and a standard deviation (SD) of 0.5 mm. For specimens with multiple drillholes (n = 95), the hole size ranges from 0.1 to 1.1 mm with a mean of 0.5 mm and a SD of 0.2 mm (Fig. 6c). The results indicate that the drillhole size in the single drillhole group is significantly larger than the multiple drillhole group (P < 0.001, M-W test).
For shells with one drillhole (n = 178), the hole size/shell length ratio ranges from 0.019 to 0.261 with a mean of 0.078 and a SD of 0.039. For holes on shells with multiple drillholes (n = 95), the hole size/shell length ratio ranges from 0.012 to 0.101 with a mean of 0.043 and a SD of 0.020 (Fig. 6d). The results indicate that the drillhole to shell length ratio is significantly larger for the single drillhole group compared to the multiple drillhole group (P < 0.001, M-W test).
4. Discussion
4.1 Prey preference
Our study covers material from the late phase (Late Cretaceous–Holocene) of predation history as defined in Kowalewski et al. (Reference Kowalewski, Dulai and Fürsich1998). DIs in T. cingulifera and other gastropods are 0.413 (0.371 for nearly complete specimens) and 0.546, respectively (Table 1). A contingency test shows that DI in T. cingulifera is significantly lower than that in other gastropods (χ 2= 21.039, P < 0.001). The overall DI (0.460) for all gastropods is relatively high compared to previous studies in other countries (Vermeij et al. Reference Vermeij, Zipser and Dudley1980; Kowalewski et al. Reference Kowalewski, Dulai and Fürsich1998; Mallick et al. Reference Mallick, Bardhan, Paul, Mukherjee and Das2013). According to Allmon et al. (Reference Allmon, Nieh and Norris1990) and Kelley & Hansen (Reference Kelley, Hansen, Kelley, Kowalewski and Hansen2003), however, high DIs (>0.40) occurred locally among Cenozoic and recent turritelline assemblages.
4.2 Multiply drilled specimens
Making one drillhole is both time and energy consuming (Guerrero & Reyment Reference Guerrero and Reyment1988), and many efficient predators often attack the prey with one strike or multiple predators may attack one individual at the same time. It is theoretically possible that multiple small muricids preyed on one larger prey simultaneously, but this scenario is unlikely due to the small size range of T. cingulifera (4.7 mm to 21.3 mm). Moreover, the parabolic drillholes on this turritellid are attributed to naticids (see below) that wrap their foot around the prey prior to drilling. Mallick et al. (Reference Mallick, Bardhan, Paul, Mukherjee and Das2013) studied Late Cretaceous turritelline gastropods below the Cretaceous–Palaeogene boundary in southern India and calculated 0.0155 for unsuccessful drillholes and 0.0377 for MULT for Turritella dispassa (n = 451). Hagadorn & Boyajian (Reference Hagadorn and Boyajian1997) reported that the incidences of multiply drilled turritelline shells are 0.129 and 0.097 for Miocene and Pliocene faunas from the United States Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plains. In general, MULT is associated with a high incidence of incomplete drillholes (see Klompmaker & Kittle Reference Klompmaker and Kittle2021). In our study, there is only one specimen with one incomplete drillhole (Fig. 4c1, c2), suggesting that predators rarely abandoned a drillhole while actively drilling due to a disturbance and/or that turritellids did not suffocate prior to completion of the drillhole (see Ansell & Morton Reference Ansell and Morton1987).
4.3 Site stereotypy
The distribution of drillholes on the prey's shell is a proxy for site selectivity and predator drilling preference (see Hagadorn & Boyajian Reference Hagadorn and Boyajian1997). Shell thickness is not uniform across the shell because the shell is thicker in the suture than on the whorl wall. Two site selectivity analyses are presented: (a) drilling on the whorl versus on the suture; and (b) distance from the aperture. Among specimens with one hole, 11.2% (20/178) occur on the relatively thick suture. In addition, the specimen with an incomplete drillhole also occurs on the suture. For specimens with multiple holes, 10.3% (10/97) of the drillholes occur on the suture.
The second measure of site stereotypy is the relative distance of holes by labelling the whorl number in which holes occurred (Fig. 3a). Allmon et al. (Reference Allmon, Nieh and Norris1990) suggested predator preference for the thinner parts (whorl in our study) of the shell and sites located two or three whorls behind the aperture of turritelline shells since the Late Cretaceous. Hagadorn & Boyajian (Reference Hagadorn and Boyajian1997) noted a shift in the drill-site selection from the Miocene predators to Pliocene predators by selecting drill sites further away from the aperture (with preference for sites located near the shell centre). In comparison, our Pleistocene predators preferred drilling whorls three to four proximal to the aperture for specimens with one hole and whorls two and three for shells with multiple drillholes (Fig. 5c). Our results parallel findings by Allmon et al. (Reference Allmon, Nieh and Norris1990). Most soft tissues are located in these whorls based on the anatomy of living turritellines (Allmon Reference Allmon2011).
4.4 Size selectivity
By comparing non-drilled and drilled shell-size distributions, we can determine if there are prey sizes that predators less frequently drilled or did not drill (i.e., size refugia) (Hagadorn & Boyajian Reference Hagadorn and Boyajian1997). In our study, specimens are divided into three groups: specimens with one drillhole (group S in Fig. 6a–d), shells with multiple drillholes (group M in Fig. 6a–d), and non-drilled shells (group N in Fig. 6b). Our results show that specimens with drillholes are covering the full range of available shell size (Fig. 5b, 6b). The K-W test P-value of 0.17 indicates there is no size refugium.
4.5 Drillhole size and predator/prey size correlation
Drillhole size is a proxy for the size of predators (Klompmaker et al. Reference Klompmaker, Kowalewski, Huntley and Finnegan2017, and references therein), and our study shows that holes in shells with one drillhole were made by predators that are significantly (P < 0.001) larger than those in specimens with multiple drillholes. Hagadorn & Boyajian (Reference Hagadorn and Boyajian1997, p. 377) stated that ‘by selecting prey that are most suited (with respect to size) to their drilling capabilities, predators can maximise their chances for successful predation’. Correlation of predator size (indicated by the size of drillholes) and prey size (indicated by the shell length) is adopted as a proxy for evaluating predator/prey size relations. For specimens with one drillhole (group S in Fig. 6d), hole size/shell length ratio has a mean of 0.078 with a range from 0.019 to 0.261. For shells with multiple drillholes (group M in Fig. 6d) hole size/shell length ratio has a mean of 0.043 with a range from 0.012 to 0.101. Our study shows that the relative hole size/shell length ratio in specimens with one drillhole is significantly larger (P < 0.001 based on the M-W test) than that in shells with multiple drillholes. Possible explanations are that soft tissues may not always have been consumed successfully and completely by the drillers due to a small hole size or that smaller predators were disrupted more frequently while consuming soft tissue. Another drillhole was created.
4.6 Predator identification
Although cylindrical drillholes are present in the current study (Fig. 4a1, a2), drillholes found in T. cingulifera are all parabolic in cross-section (Fig. 4b1, b2). Such holes are usually attributed to naticid gastropods (e.g., Kojumdjieva Reference Kojumdjieva1974; Bromley Reference Bromley1981; Kelley & Hansen Reference Kelley, Hansen, Kelley, Kowalewski and Hansen2003). There are nine naticid specimens representing two species, Polinices peselephanti and Neverita didyma (MolluscaBase 2022) (Fig. 7a, b), recovered in the current study. They are suggested here as potential drillers/tracemakers. The possible presence of a central boss in the centre of the single incomplete drillhole (Fig. 5e, f) cannot be confirmed as supporting evidence for a naticid origin of this drillhole (e.g., Kabat Reference Kabat1990) because this area is obscured by the presence of a suture. As indicated by the presence of a cylindrical hole (Fig. 4a1, a2), there may be muricid gastropods present in the Szekou fauna (Chen et al. Reference Chen, Wu, Huang and Masuda1991; Hu & Tao Reference Hu, Tao and Hu1991), but they are absent in the PT biofacies in this bulk sample study.
There is one turritelline specimen with one incomplete drillhole (Fig. 4c1, c2) in the current study. Although there are many ways to produce an incomplete drillhole, one hypothesis is the presence of secondary predator preying on the driller, causing the driller to abandon its drilling action and resulting in an incomplete drillhole on its prey (Chattopadhyay & Baumiller Reference Chattopadhyay and Baumiller2007). Based on the overall high richness of the Szekou fauna with 257 mollusc species (Chen et al. Reference Chen, Wu, Huang and Masuda1991), this hypothesis may be viable.
4.7 Living habitats and survival strategy for Turritella
Some previous, incorrect reconstructions of the orientation of living turritellids inferred that they crawled on the substrate surface (see Allmon Reference Allmon2011; Figs 62, 63). Living turritellids are mainly sessile, semi-infaunal suspension feeders in shallow marine settings with sea temperatures below 20 °C (White Reference White2009; Allmon Reference Allmon2011). Being (semi-)infaunal implies more encounters with the predominantly infaunal naticids (Kelley & Hansen Reference Kelley, Hansen, Kelley, Kowalewski and Hansen2003). The drilling pressure for turritellids has been relatively high since the Eocene (Dudley & Vermeij Reference Dudley and Vermeij1978; White Reference White2009).
Size refugia were thought to be one of the survival strategies against drilling predation. A small size refugium for prey sizes <5 mm (Chattopadhyay et al. Reference Chattopadhyay, Kella and Chttopadhyay2020) and large size refugium for prey size >20 mm (Klompmaker et al. Reference Klompmaker, Kelley, Chattopadhyay, Clements, Huntley and Kowalewski2019) have been reported. No size refugium has been found in the current study (Fig. 5b, 6b). This agrees with the conclusions based on a Miocene turritellid assemblage in Maryland, USA (Dudley & Dudley Reference Dudley and Dudley1980). The lack of size refugium begs the question how they were able to survive high predation pressure by drillers.
In the current study, we show that DI on turritellids is significantly lower than that on other gastropods (χ 2= 21.039, P < 0.001). Turritelline gastropods in general have very high reproduction rates (Allmon Reference Allmon2011) and they are the most abundant gastropods (824 out of 1280; Table 1) in our study. Given that a size refugium from drillers is not available, the high reproduction rates may be a survival strategy against the high drilling predation pressure for T. cingulifera during the deposition of the Szekou Formation.
5. Conclusions
Highlights of our findings are summarised below:
• This is the first bulk sample study on DI on Szekou molluscs.
• DIs are 0.46 and 0.06 for gastropods and bivalves. No drillholes are observed on scaphopods in the PT biofacies.
• The primary predators of T. cingulifera from the Pleistocene Szekou Formation are naticids based on the abundance of parabolic drillholes and the presence of naticid specimens.
• Drillhole sizes are significantly different between shells with one drillhole and specimens with multiple drillholes. Drillhole diameters of the shells with one drillhole and with multiple drillholes are 1.0 mm and 0.5 mm on average, respectively.
• Turritellines with incomplete drillhole(s) are rare, and the current study reports the first example from Taiwan.
• With no size refugium and a high drilling intensity for T. cingulifera, their infaunal habitat with a relatively high reproduction rate may be a possible survival strategy for T. cingulifera in the Szekou fauna.
6. Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755691023000130.
7. Acknowledgements
This work is part of the PhD dissertation for Ammu Sankar Senan at the Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University. Editor Susie Cox and three anonymous reviewers made critical and valuable comments on previous drafts. Our study is dedicated to professor Wen-Shan Chen who is a pioneer worker on the geology of Hengchun. Yi-Hsuan Wu provided helpful discussion on statistics.
8. Financial support
Fieldwork was supported by the Taiwan-ROC National Science and Technology Council grants (NSTC 111-2813-C-002-140-M to Hsu; MOST 110-2116-M-002-016 and 111-2116-M-002-023 to Lin and NSTC 112-2116-M-002-022).
9. Conflict of interest
None.