Greetings! [ Log in ] [ Register ] [ Intranet ] [ Manage Mailing Lists Subscriptions ]
  • Home
  • About
    • From the President’s Office
    • Mission
    • History
    • Staff Directory
    • Board of Trustees
      • Scoping the Future
    • Membership
    • Employment, Internships and Opportunities
    • Visiting
    • Travel Policy
  • News & Resources
    • Events Calendar
    • Press Releases
    • News Archive
    • Newsletters & Program Updates
    • Social Media
    • Requests for Proposals
    • Glossary of Acronyms
    • Ocean Leadership Logos and Style Guide
  • Programs & Partnerships
    • Census of Marine Life
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative
    • The Interagency Ocean Observation Committee
    • National Oceanographic Partnership Program
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Observatories Initiative
    • SCAMPI
    • Scientific Ocean Drilling
    • U.S. Science Support Program
  • Education
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Diversity
    • Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Sciences Educators Retreat
  • Ocean Policy & Legislation
    • Ocean Leadership Policy Priorities
    • Ocean Leadership Policy Documents
    • Upcoming Events and Recent News
    • Science Funding
    • Legislative Activities
      • Current Legislation
      • Congressional Hearings
    • Federal Activities
    • Ocean Leadership Events on the Hill
      • 2012 – Public Policy Forum
      • 2012 – Sea Grant Knauss Welcome Reception
    • Policy 101
  • Gulf Oil Spill
  • Ocean Science Experts

Tiny Shelled Creatures Shed Light on Extinction and Recovery 65 Million Years Ago

Posted by Will Ramos on Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010 at 8:07 am
Filed under: Discovery,News & Resources,Scientific Ocean Drilling
Share

(Click to enlarge image) This compilation of scanning electron microscope images of organisms includes, at left, Paleocene nannofossils from 60-55 million years ago. These fossils are all post Cretacious Paleogene boundary. At right are several living nannoplankton species. Most of the objects in this compilation are also about 8 microns. (Credit: Timothy Bralower; Penn State)

An asteroid strike may not only account for the demise of ocean and land life 65 million years ago, but the fireball’s path and the resulting dust, darkness and toxic metal contamination may explain the geographic unevenness of extinctions and recovery, according to Penn State geoscientists.

(From ScienceDaily) — “Our results shed light on the causes of nannoplankton extinction, how productivity was restored, the factors that controlled the origination of new species, and, ultimately, how phytoplankton influenced restoration of the entire marine ecosystem,” the researchers report in this month’s issue of Nature Geoscience.

The researchers, using 823 samples from 17 drilling sites in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, analyzed the community structure of calcareous — shelled — nannoplankton. Included in their study were two sites — one in the Pacific and one in the South Atlantic — with reliable, accurate dating.

“At the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, 93 percent of the nannoplankton went extinct,” said Timothy J. Bralower, head and professor of geosciences. “Nannoplankton are the base of the food chain in the ocean. If they go extinct, other, larger organisms that feed on them have problems.”

Scientists have collected large amounts of data on nannoplankton from this time period, but, according to Bralower, each sampling was looked at separately, and no one compiled the separate sampling results. Bralower, working with Shijun Jiang, postdoctoral fellow now at Florida State University and Mark E. Patzkowsky, associate professor of geosciences; Lee R. Kump, professor of geosciences, and Jonathan D. Schueth, graduate student in geosciences, all of Penn State, found that extinction level correlates with latitude. The highest rate of extinctions is in the Northern Hemisphere with decreasing extinction levels in the Southern Hemisphere.

Analysis of the signature of the asteroid that initiated the extinction event shows that the asteroid came into our atmosphere in the southeast and traveled toward the northwest ultimately colliding with Earth on the tip of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico.

“This agrees with the fact that North American land plants were hammered and there was an especially sever mass extinction on that continent,” said Bralower.

The initial dust and debris from the impact crater hit the Northern Hemisphere first and hardest. Low-diversity opportunistic organisms that appear when other nannoplankton disappear persisted in the Northern Hemisphere for 40 thousand years after the impact and this hemisphere then took 270 thousand years to recover. In the south, only intermediate levels of extinction occurred and greater diversity persisted, which agrees with the minor land plant changes in the Southern Hemisphere.

The darkness caused by the collision would impair photosynthesis and reduce nannoplankton reproduction. While full darkness did not occur, the effects in the north would have lasted for up to six months. However, with ample sunlight and large amounts of nutrients in the oceans, the populations should have bounced back, even in the North, but they did not. The researchers suggest that toxic metals that where part of the asteroid, heavily contaminated the Northern oceans and were the major factor inhibiting recovery.

“Metal loading is a great potential mechanism to delay recovery,” said Bralower. “Toxic levels in the parts per billions of copper, nickel, cadmium and iron could have inhibited recovery.”

On the one hand, the researchers considered an impact scenario causing perpetual winter and ocean acidification to explain the slow recovery, but neither explains the lag between Southern and Northern Hemispheres. Trace metal poisoning, on the other hand, would have been severe near the impact in the Northern Hemisphere. When the high temperature debris from the impact hit the water, copper, chromium, aluminum, mercury and lead would have dissolved into the seawater at likely lethal levels for plankton. Iron, zinc and manganese — normally micronutrients — would reach harmful levels shortly after the impact. Other metal sources might be acid-rain leached soils or the effects of wildfires. Metals like these can inhibit reproduction or shell formation.

The toxic metals probably exceeded the ability of organic compounds to bind them and remove them from the system. Because nannoplankton are the base of the food chain, larger organisms concentrate any metals found in nannoplankton making the metal poisoning more effective. With the toxic metals remaining in the oceans and the lack of sunlight, the length of time for recovery might increase.

“We still do not really know why some things die out, while others hang on by a shoestring and eventually recover,” said Bralower.

NASA Exobiology supported this research and drilling samples came from the National Science Foundations Integrated Ocean Drilling Program.


Related Posts:

  • AOGS – AGU (WPGM) Joint Assembly in 2012 and The AOGS Geosciences World Community Exhibition
  • American Geosciences Institute Accepting Applications for Geoscience Public Policy Internship
  • ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR ASSISTANT RESEARCH SCIENTIST/STAFF SCIENTIST AT TEXAS A&M (IODP)
  • New Map Reveals Giant Fjords Beneath East Antarctic Ice Sheet
  • 3-Foot “Shrimp” Discovered – Dominated Prehistoric Seas

Comments are closed.

« Home | « Previous Page

Discovery »

ONW: Week of January 30, 2012 – Number 154

ONW: Week of January 30, 2012 – Number 154

The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and timely information regarding our efforts, activities of the community, news from Capitol Hill, and all opportunities, jobs and internships that we feel you might find beneficial.

More articles »

Understanding »

First Phase of the NOSB Ocean Sciences Quiz Now Available

First Phase of the NOSB Ocean Sciences Quiz Now Available

The National Ocean Sciences Bowl (NOSB) has been working with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Sea Grant College Program to develop an online game to promote ocean literacy and engage students, teachers, and NOSB teams worldwide

More articles »

Action »

Ocean Leadership’s Annual Public Policy Forum 2012

Ocean Leadership’s Annual Public Policy Forum 2012

[ March 7, 2012; ] On Wednesday, March 7, the Public Policy Forum will be held in the Capitol Hill Visitors Center (Room SVC 210/212) on Capitol Hill. This year’s theme is the science of ocean and coastal restoration.

More articles »

Be an Ocean Leader

Subscribe via Twitter
4775 Followers
Subscribe via Facebook
1049 Fans
Subscribe via RSS
457 Readers
Subscribe via Email
Subscribe

Upcoming Events

  • February 16, 2012:
    • AAAS Annual Meeting 2012 (all day)
  • February 19, 2012:
    • 2012 Ocean Sciences Meeting (all day)
  • March 5, 2012:
    • SAVE THE DATE: Knauss Welcome Reception (6:00 pm)
  • March 7, 2012:
    • Ocean Leadership’s Annual Public Policy Forum 2012 (all day)
  • March 13, 2012:
    • Oceanology International 2012 (all day)
  • March 26, 2012:
    • Planet Under Pressure Conference 2012 (all day)
  • April 19, 2012:
    • 2012 NOSB Finals Competition (all day)
  • April 24, 2012:
    • 2nd ICES/PICES Conference for Early Career Scientists: Oceans of Change (all day)
  • April 27, 2012:
    • USA Science and Engineering Festival 2012 (all day)
  • April 30, 2012:
    • AGU Science Policy Conference 2012 (all day)

What's Hot This Month

  • ONW: Week of January 30, 2012 – Number 154ONW: Week of January 30, 2012 – Number 154: The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and tim...
  • Big Storms Roil Even the Deep OceanBig Storms Roil Even the Deep Ocean: Sebastian the crab may have been wrong about the deep sea. In Disney's The Little Mermaid, the orange crustacean famousl...
  • Program Updates: Year in Review 2011Program Updates: Year in Review 2011: Ocean Leadership has compiled a 2011 Year in Review for our newsletter readers. We hope that this gives you a great und...
  • In an Underwater River of Sand and Mud off the Iberian Coast, Six Million Years of Earth HistoryIn an Underwater River of Sand and Mud off the Iberian Coast, Six Million Years of Earth History: Scientists have just returned from an expedition onboard the research vessel JOIDES Resolution, during which they recove...
  • Life Beyond Earth? Underwater Caves In Bahamas Could Give CluesLife Beyond Earth? Underwater Caves In Bahamas Could Give Clues: Discoveries made in some underwater caves by Texas &M University at Galveston researchers in the Bahamas could provide c...
  • First Phase of the NOSB Ocean Sciences Quiz Now AvailableFirst Phase of the NOSB Ocean Sciences Quiz Now Available: The National Ocean Sciences Bowl (NOSB) has been working with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Sea Grant ...
  • 13 Days of Halloween: The Flying Dutchman13 Days of Halloween: The Flying Dutchman: As the story is told, an ancient 17th Century Dutch sailing ship is occasionally seen by ship’s crews as their vessels b...
  • Ecologists Among The First To Record And Study Deep-Sea Fish Noises; ‘A Wealth Of Biological Sounds’Ecologists Among The First To Record And Study Deep-Sea Fish Noises; ‘A Wealth Of Biological Sounds’: University of Massachusetts Amherst fish biologists have published one of the first studies of deep-sea fish sounds in m...
  • Bipartisan Group of Senators Announce Formation of Oceans CaucusBipartisan Group of Senators Announce Formation of Oceans Caucus: With our oceans and coastal resources, and the economies and jobs they support, facing constant and increasingly direct ...
  • ONW: Week of January 23, 2012 – Number 153ONW: Week of January 23, 2012 – Number 153: The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and tim...

Comments

Archives

Visitors Online

17 Users Online

Recent Posts

  • Opportunity: Environmental Defense Fund Director – Gulf and Southeast Oceans Program, Austin, TX
  • Opportunity: Post-Doctoral Research Scientist, Texas A&M Corpus Christi
  • Opportunity: President and Director, Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (BIOS)
  • ONW: Week of January 30, 2012 – Number 154
  • From the President’s Office – 2/2/2012

RSS JOIDES Resolution Blog

  • We did it... cheira a Lisboa!!!
  • Et le logging !
  • Who’s who on Expedition 339?
  • On l’a fait !!!
  • Ready to go home!!!

RSS ScienceDaily

  • Whole exome sequencing identifies cause of metabolic disease
  • Discovery of extremely long-lived proteins may provide insight into cell aging and neurodegenerative diseases
  • A lonely heart can make you sick: Middle aged divorced women vulnerable to contracting HIV
  • Schooling protects refugee children from disease
  • The complex relationship between memory and silence
QR Code Business Card Web design by Will Ramos | © Copyright Consortium for Ocean Leadership 2007-2011. All Rights Reserved. | 23 queries in 0.733 seconds.