Literature DB >> 31554971

Diversity decoupled from ecosystem function and resilience during mass extinction recovery.

Sarah A Alvarez1,2,3, Samantha J Gibbs4, Paul R Bown5, Hojung Kim5, Rosie M Sheward6, Andy Ridgwell7.   

Abstract

The Chicxulub bolide impact 66 million years ago drove the near-instantaneous collapse of ocean ecosystems. The devastating loss of diversity at the base of ocean food webs probably triggered cascading extinctions across all trophic levels1-3 and caused severe disruption of the biogeochemical functions of the ocean, and especially disrupted the cycling of carbon between the surface and deep sea4,5. The absence of sufficiently detailed biotic data that span the post-extinction interval has limited our understanding of how ecosystem resilience and biochemical function was restored; estimates6-8 of ecosystem 'recovery' vary from less than 100 years to 10 million years. Here, using a 13-million-year-long nannoplankton time series, we show that post-extinction communities exhibited 1.8 million years of exceptional volatility before a more stable equilibrium-state community emerged that displayed hallmarks of resilience. The transition to this new equilibrium-state community with a broader spectrum of cell sizes coincides with indicators of carbon-cycle restoration and a fully functioning biological pump9. These findings suggest a fundamental link between ecosystem recovery and biogeochemical cycling over timescales that are longer than those suggested by proxies of export production7,8, but far shorter than the return of taxonomic richness6. The fact that species richness remained low as both community stability and biological pump efficiency re-emerged suggests that ecological functions rather than the number of species are more important to community resilience and biochemical functions.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31554971     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1590-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  Impacts of biodiversity loss escalate through time as redundancy fades.

Authors:  Peter B Reich; David Tilman; Forest Isbell; Kevin Mueller; Sarah E Hobbie; Dan F B Flynn; Nico Eisenhauer
Journal:  Science       Date:  2012-05-04       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total
  6 in total

1.  The oldest record of Saurosphargiformes (Diapsida) from South China could fill an ecological gap in the Early Triassic biotic recovery.

Authors:  Long Cheng; Benjamin C Moon; Chunbo Yan; Ryosuke Motani; Dayong Jiang; Zhihui An; Zichen Fang
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-07-14       Impact factor: 3.061

2.  Algal plankton turn to hunting to survive and recover from end-Cretaceous impact darkness.

Authors:  Samantha J Gibbs; Paul R Bown; Ben A Ward; Sarah A Alvarez; Hojung Kim; Odysseas A Archontikis; Boris Sauterey; Alex J Poulton; Jamie Wilson; Andy Ridgwell
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2020-10-30       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Ecosystem function after the K/Pg extinction: decoupling of marine carbon pump and diversity.

Authors:  Heather Birch; Daniela N Schmidt; Helen K Coxall; Dick Kroon; Andy Ridgwell
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-06-23       Impact factor: 5.530

4.  Metabolic pathways inferred from a bacterial marker gene illuminate ecological changes across South Pacific frontal boundaries.

Authors:  Eric J Raes; Kristen Karsh; Swan L S Sow; Martin Ostrowski; Mark V Brown; Jodie van de Kamp; Rita M Franco-Santos; Levente Bodrossy; Anya M Waite
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-04-13       Impact factor: 14.919

5.  Diversity dynamics of microfossils from the Cretaceous to the Neogene show mixed responses to events.

Authors:  Katie M Jamson; Benjamin C Moon; Andrew J Fraass
Journal:  Palaeontology       Date:  2022-07-15       Impact factor: 3.547

6.  The origin and diversification of pteropods precede past perturbations in the Earth's carbon cycle.

Authors:  Katja T C A Peijnenburg; Arie W Janssen; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Erica Goetze; Amy E Maas; Jonathan A Todd; Ferdinand Marlétaz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-09-24       Impact factor: 12.779

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.