- Posts: 8163
The Arrival Of Animals Triggered Earth's First Mass Extinction
07 Sep 2015 15:00 #202192
by
http://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/animal-arrival-triggered-earths-first-mass-extinction
The Arrival Of Animals Triggered Earth's First Mass Extinction
One of the first things I thought of was how this seems to relate exactly to what's happening now with climate change and the occurrence of Intelligence.
The Arrival Of Animals Triggered Earth's First Mass Extinction
Warning: Spoiler!
The first great extinction of life was caused by an evolutionary advance, rather than a catastrophe such as an asteroid strike or supervolcano, evidence from Namibia suggests. The arrival of animals, with the newfangled advantage called movement, spelled doom for species trapped in one place.
For three billion years, the only life on Earth was single-celled microbes. Around 600 million years ago, the first multi-celled organisms, known as the Ediacaran biota, appeared. Sixty million years later, these were followed by the first animals, an evolutionary experiment with a bewildering range of body types known as the Cambrian explosion.
Around the time of the Cambrian explosion, many of the Ediacaran species disappeared. The extinction is not considered as disastrous as the “Great Dying” at the end of the Permian era, but in terms of species loss, it probably exceeded the Cretaceous-Paleogene event that extinguished non-avian dinosaurs.
Paleontologists have pondered whether some dramatic event wiped out the Ediacaran species, making way for something new, or if the arrival of animals led to the extinction of their predecessors. Resolving this question is hard, because fossil records from the period are so sparse.
"These new species were 'ecological engineers' who changed the environment in ways that made it more and more difficult for the Ediacarans to survive," said Vanderbilt University’s Simon Darroch, first author of the paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. He argues that it was changes wrought by these animals that eventually caused so many lifeforms to die out, rather than an external event.
“We perform the first critical test of the ‘biotic replacement’ hypothesis,” Darroch and his co-authors write of their work at Farm Swartpunt, Namibia. The fossils found there date from 545 million years ago, 1-2 million years before the end of the Ediacaran. “Even after accounting for a variety of potential sampling and taphonomic biases, the Ediacaran assemblage preserved at Farm Swartpunt has significantly lower genus richness than older assemblages.” The slow decline of diverse taxa is inconsistent with a sudden catastrophe.
In sediment from the same time that the Ediacaran lifeforms were disappearing, Darroch found traces of burrows and tracks from pre-Cambrian animal species, indications that are rarer or absent in the other great Ediacaran sites in Newfoundland, South Australia and Russia.
“We found that the diversity of species at this site was much lower, and there was evidence of greater ecological stress, than at comparable sites that are 10 million to 15 million years older,” Darroch said.
Animals had a single enormous advantage over the species that preceded them: they could move. This enabled them to literally eat the opposition, wiping out all those species that did not adapt in one way or another to this new threat.
“There is a powerful analogy between the Earth’s first mass extinction and what is happening today,” Darroch said. “The end-Ediacaran extinction shows that the evolution of new behaviors can fundamentally change the entire planet, and we are the most powerful ‘ecosystem engineers’ ever known.”
For three billion years, the only life on Earth was single-celled microbes. Around 600 million years ago, the first multi-celled organisms, known as the Ediacaran biota, appeared. Sixty million years later, these were followed by the first animals, an evolutionary experiment with a bewildering range of body types known as the Cambrian explosion.
Around the time of the Cambrian explosion, many of the Ediacaran species disappeared. The extinction is not considered as disastrous as the “Great Dying” at the end of the Permian era, but in terms of species loss, it probably exceeded the Cretaceous-Paleogene event that extinguished non-avian dinosaurs.
Paleontologists have pondered whether some dramatic event wiped out the Ediacaran species, making way for something new, or if the arrival of animals led to the extinction of their predecessors. Resolving this question is hard, because fossil records from the period are so sparse.
"These new species were 'ecological engineers' who changed the environment in ways that made it more and more difficult for the Ediacarans to survive," said Vanderbilt University’s Simon Darroch, first author of the paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. He argues that it was changes wrought by these animals that eventually caused so many lifeforms to die out, rather than an external event.
“We perform the first critical test of the ‘biotic replacement’ hypothesis,” Darroch and his co-authors write of their work at Farm Swartpunt, Namibia. The fossils found there date from 545 million years ago, 1-2 million years before the end of the Ediacaran. “Even after accounting for a variety of potential sampling and taphonomic biases, the Ediacaran assemblage preserved at Farm Swartpunt has significantly lower genus richness than older assemblages.” The slow decline of diverse taxa is inconsistent with a sudden catastrophe.
In sediment from the same time that the Ediacaran lifeforms were disappearing, Darroch found traces of burrows and tracks from pre-Cambrian animal species, indications that are rarer or absent in the other great Ediacaran sites in Newfoundland, South Australia and Russia.
“We found that the diversity of species at this site was much lower, and there was evidence of greater ecological stress, than at comparable sites that are 10 million to 15 million years older,” Darroch said.
Animals had a single enormous advantage over the species that preceded them: they could move. This enabled them to literally eat the opposition, wiping out all those species that did not adapt in one way or another to this new threat.
“There is a powerful analogy between the Earth’s first mass extinction and what is happening today,” Darroch said. “The end-Ediacaran extinction shows that the evolution of new behaviors can fundamentally change the entire planet, and we are the most powerful ‘ecosystem engineers’ ever known.”
One of the first things I thought of was how this seems to relate exactly to what's happening now with climate change and the occurrence of Intelligence.
Please Log in to join the conversation.
07 Sep 2015 21:41 - 07 Sep 2015 21:42 #202226
by Adder
Replied by Adder on topic The Arrival Of Animals Triggered Earth's First Mass Extinction
Seemingly life is consumption! Its even what Yoda was representing when he first hassled Luke. Though perhaps its the safest base instincts to mimick when meeting new life forms which are larger then you, as it represents hunger (I'm not a good meal because I'm starving) but also weakness as a result which lures the larger creature into making an over confident move and revealing its true nature/intentions more readily.
Which sort of makes evolution a measure of how well we consume... just need to define how we measure 'well' I guess. Population growth is going to be a problem IMO, if we don't get offworld, where the new colony awaits
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZNzz4SaTYk
LOL, sorry, I'm a BladeRunner nut, still
Climate change is just one byproduct of that population growth I think, and others will probably emerge just as quick. It's going to be a bumpy ride
:blink:
Which sort of makes evolution a measure of how well we consume... just need to define how we measure 'well' I guess. Population growth is going to be a problem IMO, if we don't get offworld, where the new colony awaits
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZNzz4SaTYk
LOL, sorry, I'm a BladeRunner nut, still
Climate change is just one byproduct of that population growth I think, and others will probably emerge just as quick. It's going to be a bumpy ride
:blink:
Last edit: 07 Sep 2015 21:42 by Adder.
Please Log in to join the conversation.
- OB1Shinobi
- Offline
- Banned
Less
More
- Posts: 4394
08 Sep 2015 02:26 - 08 Sep 2015 02:27 #202234
by OB1Shinobi
People are complicated.
Replied by OB1Shinobi on topic The Arrival Of Animals Triggered Earth's First Mass Extinction
since we may develop just enough intelligence to wipe ourselves out it occured to me that life itself may judge intelligence as nothing really special in the long run
an experiment that ran its course
when i had that thought i felt humbled
adding to the idea of overpopulation; i believe that functional immortality will be discovered/developed by advances in biology and biotechnology in the next 100 years, maybe less
which REALLY complicates that issue
an experiment that ran its course
when i had that thought i felt humbled
adding to the idea of overpopulation; i believe that functional immortality will be discovered/developed by advances in biology and biotechnology in the next 100 years, maybe less
which REALLY complicates that issue
People are complicated.
Last edit: 08 Sep 2015 02:27 by OB1Shinobi.
Please Log in to join the conversation.