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Lecture 29 : Mass Extinctions

Lecture 29 : Mass Extinctions. X. X. X. X. X. X. X. X. Phanerozoic Mass Extinctions. Mississippian. Pennsylvanian. Jurassic. biodiversity. Cambrian. Ma. Apparent percentage of marine animals going extinct. O. C. P. T. D. J.

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Lecture 29 : Mass Extinctions

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  1. Lecture 29: Mass Extinctions

  2. X X X X X X X X

  3. Phanerozoic Mass Extinctions Mississippian Pennsylvanian Jurassic biodiversity Cambrian Ma

  4. Apparent percentage of marine animals going extinct

  5. O C P T D J

  6. Magnitude (biodiversity loss during extinction event) X Intensity (duration of extinction event) Measure of extinction event

  7. Ordovician Mass Extinction(s) • Global cooling and widespread glaciers in southern continents • Global sea level drops – continental shelves exposed • Third largest Phanerozoic extinction event - 60% of marine invertebrates wiped out

  8. Devonian Mass Extinction(s) 354 Hangenberg Event Kellwasser Event 416 • Causes: • * Rapid, multiple pulses of transgressions/regression • * Widespread oceanic anoxia • * Bolide impact? Results: 22% of all families, 57% of genera and 75% of species extinct

  9. Mississippian Extinction Causes: * Global cooling and south polar glaciation • Results - Seventh largest mass extinction of the Phanerozoic Era: • * Numerous brachiopod genera extinct globally, many others locally. Nearshore genera suffered veryslightly higher rates of extinction. • * Extinction didnot select against genera because of their environmental breadth,number of regional occurrences (a proxy for relative abundance),species diversity, or body size. • Extinction did strongly select against genera with narrow global latitudinalranges. • * Genera that survived late Mississippianmass extinction dominate global brachiopod faunas untilthe middle Permian.

  10. Pennsylvanian Extinction Causes - Within a few thousand years: * Global temperatures become cooler and drier * Intense ice age and global sea level fall (300 ft.) * End-Carboniferous global warming Results: * Coal forest devastation – Once cosmopolitan ecosystem fragmented into smaller “islands”; cannot adapt to quickly increasing temperatures. * Vertebrate and invertebrate groups tied to coal forests die out – includes many amphibian groups and large insect species * Reptiles fare well – remember the amniote egg!

  11. Permian Mass Extinction • Mississippian/Pennsylvanian • mass extinctions: • Glaciation at southern pole – less water in ocean basins • Uplift – increased sediment supply • Pangea forms – less coastal area • Permian mass extinction: • Miss./Penn. causes, + • Siberian Traps • Bolide? • Methane traps?

  12. The most devastating of all mass extinctions. Nearly 96% of all marine and terrestrial species went extinct. Very rapid! • In the sea rugose and tabulate corals, trilobites, many classes, orders and families of crinoids, brachiopods, ammonoids, as well as other echinoderm, mollusk, and vertebrate taxa went extinct. • On land a total breakdown of terrestrial ecosystems occurred. Most vertebrate and plant groups went extinct. • The Earth came close to a pre-Ediacaran (Late Proterozoic) state – i.e., being nearly devoid of multicellular animal and plant life. • Cause(s) of the extinction are not totally known, but may include rapid global warming, anoxic oceans, widespread volcanism, methane gas release, and/or extraterrestrial impact.

  13. Following the Permian mass extinction: * Triassic terrestrial and marine ecosystems devastated. * Soil formation was halted on land, seas were anoxic. * Land and seas populated by very few species – surviving species dominate ecosystems (low diversity but high abundance). * Triassic recovery from the mass extinction took nearly 6 Ma.

  14. Triassic Mass Extinction Causes: Bolide? No Triassic-Jurassic impact crater identified Gradual climate change or sea level fluctuations? To sudden… Massive volcanic activity? Massive volumes of basaltic magma extruded (CAMP). Paleosols preserve huge spike in CO2, HS2, aerosols – would cause intense global warming or global cooling Biocalcification crisis? Organisms unable to utilize CaCO3 Results: 20% of all marine families extinct (conodonts gone) At least 50% of all known species extinct (i.e., non-crocodile crurotarsans, some therapsids, many large amphibians) Extinction of groups of large reptiles allows for eventual dominance of dinosaurs during Jurassic Period

  15. Jurassic Extinction Causes: Unknown… Results: “Minor” mass extinction, including most stegosaurids and sauropods, many genera of ammonoids, marine reptiles, and bivalves extinct

  16. Cretaceous Mass Extinction

  17. Causes: • * Asteroid impacts (Wetumpka, Manson, esp. Chicxulub) • * Massive volcanic activity (Deccan Traps) – huge volumes of basaltic magma extruded, noxious gases released into atmosphere • * Net effect is reduced sunlight and photosynthesis – collapse of food chain • * Gradual sea level and climate changes? Evidence for end-Cretaceous cooling global temperatures…

  18. Results of Cretaceous Mass Extinction • Extinction of: • Non-avian dinosaurs • Mosasaurs • Ammonites • Pterosaurs • Significant fuanal turnover of: • Ostracodes • Coccolithophores • Radiolarians • Foraminifera • Terrestrial plants • Mollusks extinct • Survivors - the more generalized, the better: • 80% of cartilaginous fish • 90% of bony fish • Turtles • Crocodilians • Avian dinosaurs • Squamate lizards • Mammals

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