Literature DB >> 19320746

Climate and vegetational regime shifts in the late Paleozoic ice age earth.

W A DiMichele1, I P Montañez, C J Poulsen, N J Tabor.   

Abstract

The late Paleozoic earth experienced alternation between glacial and non-glacial climates at multiple temporal scales, accompanied by atmospheric CO2 fluctuations and global warming intervals, often attended by significant vegetational changes in equatorial latitudes of Pangaea. We assess the nature of climate-vegetation interaction during two time intervals: middle-late Pennsylvanian transition and Pennsylvanian-Permian transition, each marked by tropical warming and drying. In case study 1, there is a catastrophic intra-biomic reorganization of dominance and diversity in wetland, evergreen vegetation growing under humid climates. This represents a threshold-type change, possibly a regime shift to an alternative stable state. Case study 2 is an inter-biome dominance change in western and central Pangaea from humid wetland and seasonally dry to semi-arid vegetation. Shifts between these vegetation types had been occurring in Euramerican portions of the equatorial region throughout the late middle and late Pennsylvanian, the drier vegetation reaching persistent dominance by Early Permian. The oscillatory transition between humid and seasonally dry vegetation appears to demonstrate a threshold-like behavior but probably not repeated transitions between alternative stable states. Rather, changes in dominance in lowland equatorial regions were driven by long-term, repetitive climatic oscillations, occurring with increasing intensity, within overall shift to seasonal dryness through time. In neither case study are there clear biotic or abiotic warning signs of looming changes in vegetational composition or geographic distribution, nor is it clear that there are specific, absolute values or rates of environmental change in temperature, rainfall distribution and amount, or atmospheric composition, approach to which might indicate proximity to a terrestrial biotic-change threshold.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19320746     DOI: 10.1111/j.1472-4669.2009.00192.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Geobiology        ISSN: 1472-4669            Impact factor:   4.407


  7 in total

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Authors:  Jerome Murienne; Savel R Daniels; Thomas R Buckley; Georg Mayer; Gonzalo Giribet
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2013-11-27       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Conservatism of Late Pennsylvanian vegetational patterns during short-term cyclic and long-term directional environmental change, western equatorial Pangea.

Authors:  Neil J Tabor; Charles M Romanchock; Cynthia V Looy; Carol L Hotton; William A Dimichele; Dan S Chaney
Journal:  Geol Soc Spec Publ       Date:  2013-09-19

3.  Spatiotemporal relationships among Late Pennsylvanian plant assemblages: Palynological evidence from the Markley Formation, West Texas, U.S.A.

Authors:  Cindy V Looy; Carol L Hotton
Journal:  Rev Palaeobot Palynol       Date:  2014-12-01       Impact factor: 1.940

4.  Freeze tolerance influenced forest cover and hydrology during the Pennsylvanian.

Authors:  William J Matthaeus; Sophia I Macarewich; Jon D Richey; Jonathan P Wilson; Jennifer C McElwain; Isabel P Montañez; William A DiMichele; Michael T Hren; Christopher J Poulsen; Joseph D White
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-10-19       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Physical and environmental drivers of Paleozoic tetrapod dispersal across Pangaea.

Authors:  Neil Brocklehurst; Emma M Dunne; Daniel D Cashmore; Jӧrg Frӧbisch
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-12-06       Impact factor: 14.919

6.  A Carboniferous synapsid with caniniform teeth and a reappraisal of mandibular size-shape heterodonty in the origin of mammals.

Authors:  Adam K Huttenlocker; Suresh A Singh; Amy C Henrici; Stuart S Sumida
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 2.963

7.  Rates and modes of body size evolution in early carnivores and herbivores: a case study from Captorhinidae.

Authors:  Neil Brocklehurst
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2016-01-11       Impact factor: 2.984

  7 in total

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