by News Staff
September 16, 2024
from
SCI-News Website
An illustration
depicting
the onset of the
end-Permian mass extinction.
Image credit: Dawid
Adam Iurino
PaleoFactory,
Sapienza University of Rome
Jurikova et al, doi:
10.1038/s41561-020-00646-4.
The end-Permian mass extinction, which occurred about 252 million
years ago, was the most severe extinction event in the past 540
million years, eliminating more than 90% of marine and 75% of
terrestrial species.
Scientists have long linked this
extinction to vast volcanic
eruptions in what is now Siberia.
The resulting carbon dioxide emissions rapidly
accelerated climate warming, resulting in widespread stagnation and
the collapse of marine and terrestrial ecosystems.
But what caused life on land, including plants
and usually resilient insects, to suffer just as badly, has remained
a source of mystery.
"Climate warming alone cannot drive such
devastating extinctions because, as we are seeing today, when
the tropics become too hot, species migrate to the cooler,
higher latitudes," said University of Bristol's Dr. Alexander
Farnsworth.
"Our research has revealed that increased
greenhouse gases don't just make the majority of the planet
warmer, they also increase weather and climate variability
making it even more 'wild' and difficult for life to survive."
"The
Permian-Triassic catastrophe
shows the problem of global warming is not just a matter of it
becoming unbearably hot, but also a case of conditions swinging
wildly over decades."
"Most life failed to adapt to these conditions, but thankfully a
few things survived, without which we wouldn't be here today.
It was nearly, but not quite, the end of the
life on Earth," said China University of Geosciences Professor
Yadong Sun.
The scale of end-Permian warming was revealed by
studying oxygen isotopes in the fossilized tooth material of tiny
extinct swimming organisms called
conodonts.
By studying the temperature record of conodonts from around
the world, the researchers were able to show a remarkable collapse
of temperature gradients in the low and mid latitudes.
"Essentially, it got too hot everywhere," Dr.
Farnsworth said.
"The changes responsible for the climate patterns identified
were profound because there were much more intense and prolonged
El Niño events than witnessed today."
"Species were simply not equipped to adapt or evolve quickly
enough."
A geological field
section reveals
a desiccated (extreme
dryness) land surface
that was common all
over the world
252 million
years ago.
Image credit:
University of Bristol
China University of
Geosciences.
In recent years,
El Niño events have caused major
changes in rainfall patterns and temperature.
For example,
the weather extremes that caused the June
2024 North American heat-wave when temperatures were around 15
degrees Celsius hotter than normal.
2023-2024 was also one of the hottest years on
record globally due to a strong El Niño in the Pacific, which was
further exacerbated by increased human-induced carbon dioxide
(CO2)
driving catastrophic drought and fires around the world.
"Fortunately such events so far have only
lasted one to two years at a time," said University of Leeds
Professor Paul Wignall.
"During the Permian-Triassic crisis, El Niño persisted for much
longer resulting in a decade of widespread drought, followed by
years of flooding."
"Basically, the climate was all over the place and that makes it
very hard for any species to adapt."
The results of the climate modeling also help
explain the abundant charcoal found in rock layers of that age.
"Wildfires become very common if you have a
drought-prone climate," said University of Hull Professor
David Bond.
"Earth got stuck in a crisis state where the land was burning
and the oceans stagnating.
There was nowhere to hide."
The researchers observed that throughout Earth's
history there have been many volcanic events similar to those in
Siberia, and many caused extinctions, but none led to a crisis of
the scale of the end-Permian event.
They found the extinction was so different because these mega-El
Niños created positive feedback on the climate which led to
incredibly warm conditions starting in the tropics and then beyond,
resulting in the dieback of vegetation.
Plants are essential for removing carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere, as well as the foundation of the food web, and if they
die so does one of the Earth's mechanisms to stop carbon dioxide
building up in the atmosphere as a result of continued volcanism.
This also helps explain the conundrum regarding the end-Permian
mass extinction whereby the extinction on land occurred tens of
thousands of years before extinction in the oceans.
"Whilst the oceans were initially shielded
from the temperature rises, the mega-El Nino's caused
temperatures on land to exceed most species thermal tolerances
at rates so rapid that they could not adapt in time," Dr. Sun
said.
"Only species that could migrate quickly could survive, and
there weren't many plants or animals that could do that."
"The Permo-Triassic mass extinction, although devastating, would
ultimately see the rise of dinosaurs becoming the dominant
species thereafter as would the end-Cretaceous mass extinction
lead to the rise of mammals, and humans," Dr. Farnsworth said.
The results (Mega
El Niño instigated the end-Permian mass extinction) were
published in the journal Science...
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