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Rationale Dacryoconarids are extinct marine zooplankton known from abundant, globally distributed calcite microfossils in the Devonian, but their shell stable isotope composition has not been previously explored. Devonian stable isotope stratigraphy is currently limited to less common invertebrates or bulk rock analyses of uncertain provenance. As with Cenozoic planktonic foraminifera, isotopic analysis of dacryoconarid shells could facilitate higher-resolution, geographically widespread stable isotope records of paleoenvironmental change, including marine hypoxia events, climate changes, and biocrises. We explored the use of Dacryoconarid isotope stratigraphy as a viable method in interpreting paleoenvironments. Methods We applied an established method for determining stable isotope ratios (δ13C, δ18O values) of small carbonate microfossils to very well-preserved dacryoconarid shells. We analyzed individual calcite shells representing five common genera using a Kiel carbonate device coupled to a MAT 253 isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Calcite shell δ13C and δ18O values were compared by taxonomic group, rock unit, and locality. Results Single dacryoconarid calcite shells are suitable for stable isotope analysis using a Kiel-IRMS setup. The dacryoconarid shell δ13C values (–4.7 to 2.3‰) and δ18O values (–10.3 to –4.8‰) were consistent across taxa, independent of shell size or part, but varied systematically through time. Lower fossil δ18O values were associated with warmer water temperature and more variable δ13C values were associated with major bioevents. Dacryoconarid δ13C and δ18O values differed from bulk rock carbonate values. Conclusions Dacryoconarid individual microfossil δ13C and δ18O values are highly sensitive to paleoenvironmental changes, thus providing a promising avenue for stable isotope chemostratigraphy to better resolve regional to global paleoceanographic changes throughout the upper Silurian to the upper Devonian. Our results warrant further exploration of dacryoconarid stable isotope proxy sensitivity, the isotopic contrast among dacryoconarids, other taxa, and bulk rock, as well as other potential dacryoconarid proxies (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, 87Sr/86Sr, microlaser and ion microprobe isotope techniques, and clumped isotopes) for stratigraphic research. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |