Why the Early Paleozoic was intrinsically prone to marine extinction

Author:

Pohl Alexandre1ORCID,Stockey Richard G.2ORCID,Dai Xu1ORCID,Yohler Ryan3ORCID,Le Hir Guillaume4ORCID,Hülse Dominik56ORCID,Brayard Arnaud1ORCID,Finnegan Seth3ORCID,Ridgwell Andy6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biogéosciences, UMR 6282 CNRS, Université de Bourgogne, 6 Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.

2. School of Ocean and Earth Science, National Oceanography Centre Southampton, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.

3. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.

4. Université de Paris, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRS, 1 rue Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France.

5. Max-Planck-Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany.

6. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Riverside, CA, USA.

Abstract

The geological record of marine animal biodiversity reflects the interplay between changing rates of speciation versus extinction. Compared to mass extinctions, background extinctions have received little attention. To disentangle the different contributions of global climate state, continental configuration, and atmospheric oxygen concentration ( p O 2 ) to variations in background extinction rates, we drive an animal physiological model with the environmental outputs from an Earth system model across intervals spanning the past 541 million years. We find that climate and continental configuration combined to make extinction susceptibility an order of magnitude higher during the Early Paleozoic than during the rest of the Phanerozoic, consistent with extinction rates derived from paleontological databases. The high extinction susceptibility arises in the model from the limited geographical range of marine organisms. It stands even when assuming present-day p O 2 , suggesting that increasing oxygenation through the Paleozoic is not necessary to explain why extinction rates apparently declined with time.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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