2025-09-152025-09-152024-10-01CORRÊA, Luiz Felipe Aquino. Braquiópodes devonianos da Bacia do Amazonas: novos dados taxonômicos, paleobiogeográficos e relações com as mudanças ambientais. Orientadora: Maria Inês Feijó Ramos. 2024. xxi. 173 f. Tese (Doutorado em Geologia) - Programa de Pós-Graduação em Geologia e Geoquímica, Instituto de Geociências, Universidade Federal do Pará, Belém, 2024. Disponível em:https://repositorio.ufpa.br/jspui/handle/2011/17731 . Acesso em:.https://repositorio.ufpa.br/jspui/handle/2011/17731The Devonian marked a significant phase in the evolutionary history of the Brachiopoda. During this period, the Phylum achieved its peak diversity (Emsian) and suffered one of its most significant declines (Frasnian–Famennian), ranking second only to the mass extinction event Permo-Triassic. Among the Brazilian sedimentary basins, the Amazonas Basin has the greater diversity of Devonian brachiopod genera, distributed among the following formations: Manacapuru (Lochkovian), Maecuru (early Eifelian), Ererê (Late Eifelian), and Barreirinha (early Frasnian). Studies of Devonian brachiopods from the Amazonas Basin began in the late 19th century with identifications of material collected during the Morgan Expeditions (1870–1871) and the Imperial Geological Commission of Brazil (1876). These expeditions focused primarily on the Maecuru and Ererê formations. The brachiopod fauna of the Manacapuru Formation (Lochkovian) was unknown until 2015, when during paleontological salvage at the Belo Monte hydroelectric plant in Vitória do Xingu, Pará, Brazil, a significant number of Rhynchonelliformes and Linguliformes samples were recovered. This work aims to carry out the taxonomic identification of brachiopods from the Manacapuru Formation, in addition to analyzing and discussing the possible factors that influenced the diversity of brachiopod genera among the sedimentary units of the Amazonas Basin (Mancapuru, Maecuru, Ererê, and Barreirinha formations). The taxonomic study of brachiopods from the upper part of the Manacapuru Formation (Lochkovian) has allowed, to date, the identification of two genera, Orbiculoidea d'Órbigny, 1847 and Schellwienella Thomas, 1910. Among the materials, Orbiculoidea has the greater diversity, totaling five species: Orbiculoidea baini Sharpe, 1856, Orbiculoidea bodenbenderi Clarke, 1913 and Orbiculoidea excentrica Lange, 1943 in addition to two new species: Orbiculoidea xinguensis Corrêa & Ramos, 2021 and Orbiculoidea katzeri Corrêa & Ramos, 2021. The species O. baini, O. bodenbenderi, and O. excentrica were recorded for the first time in the Manacapuru Formation and Northern Brazil, and they are also the oldest records (Lochkovian) from South America. The presence of Orbiculoidea in the region can be explained by two reasons: the proximity of the Amazonas Basin, located in the northwest of Gondwana during the Lower Devonian, with the paleocontinent Laurussia (where most occurrences of Orbiculoidea are recorded during the Silurian), favored the specific exchange between these two geographic regions; and the global rise in sea level during this period, which flooded much of northwest Gondwana, resulting in the presence of shallow seas in the Amazonas Basin, represented by marine sediments in the upper part of the Manacapuru Formation. These conditions favored the colonization of inarticulate brachiopods during the Early Devonian in northern Brazil. Furthermore, the new species Schellwienella amazonensis Corrêa et al. 2024, of the Pulsiidae Family Cooper and Grant, 1974, is proposed, this being the first record of the genus in the Amazonas Basin. Schellwienella amazonensis n. sp. and Schellwienella marcidula Amsden, 1958 from the Bois d’Arc Formation (Lochkovian), USA, are the oldest records of the genus. In the Devonian, Schellwienella occurred in all stages (Lochkovian, Pragian, Emsian, Eifelian, Givetian, Frasnian, and Famennian), mainly in the marine siliciclastic environments of Gondwana, transiting between temperate and polar latitudes. In the Carboniferous, its stratigraphic distribution was restricted to the Tournaisian-Visean interval, with a preference for warm water environments and carbonate platforms typical of low latitudes. We identified three distinct stages when analyzing the variation in Devonian brachiopod diversity in the Amazonas Basin. In stage 1, the peak of brachiopod diversity occurred in the early Eifelian (Maecuru Formation), when the Amazonas Basin was between subtropical latitudes 30°S and 60°S, under shallow and cold marine conditions, justified by the absence of carbonates, evaporites, and reefs in the region. In stage 2, the first decline in diversity occurred, recorded in the Ererê Formation (late Eifelian), attributed to a warmer climate and deeper waters than in the Maecuru Formation. Stage 3 occurred during the Frasnian when there was a second decline in brachiopod diversity in the Amazonas Basin (Barreirinha Formation). A major global transgression happened at the end of the Devonian. During this period, the Amazonas Basin experienced the deepest marine conditions in its history. Brachiopods of the Barreirinha Formation occur in black shale layers (offshore), attributed to a dysoxic to the anoxic environment of high stress, which explains the low diversity of brachiopods in this unit.Acesso AbertoAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazilhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/br/OrbiculoideaSchellwienellaFormação ManacapuruLochkovianoManacapuru FormationBraquiópodes devonianos da Bacia do Amazonas: novos dados taxonômicos, paleobiográficos e relações com as mudanças ambientaisTeseCNPQ::CIENCIAS EXATAS E DA TERRA::GEOCIENCIAS::GEOLOGIAANÁLISE DE BACIAS SEDIMENTARESGEOLOGIA