- Life Sciences - 07:30
Wake up call for koala protection - Business - May 23
Supercomputing set to boost region’s competitiveness - Medicine - May 23
’How- to’ video tutorials could boost hearing aid use, say researchers - Life Sciences - May 23
Stem-cell- growing surface enables bone repair - Life Sciences - May 23
The Search for the Earliest Signs of Alzheimer’s - Life Sciences - May 23
Researchers develop new genetic method to pinpoint individuals’ geographic origin - Medicine - May 23
Prevalence of kidney stones doubles in wake of obesity epidemic - Earth Sciences - May 23
Nea Kameni volcano movement captured by Envisat - Business - May 23
A wake-up call for manufacturing - Environmental Sciences - May 23
Oil expertise centre to boost growth - Life Sciences - May 23
Marine biologist works with primary school to teach children about life under the waves - Physics - May 23
Lying in Wait for WIMPs - Medicine - May 23
Common diseases increase risk of cancer - Business - May 23
Economic power of self- employment felt countywide - Business - May 23
Social welfare cuts ultimately come with heavy price, researchers say - Computer Science - May 23
New £3.5m supercomputing investment set to boost regions competitiveness
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
Environmental Sciences
Earth Sciences
Life Sciences
Medicine
Business
Literature
History
Psychology
Social Sciences
» » more
Ancient environment found to drive marine biodiversity
Much of our knowledge about past life has come from the fossil record — but how accurately does that reflect the true history and drivers of biodiversity on Earth?
"It’s a question that goes back a long way to the time of Darwin, who looked at the fossil record and tried to understand what it tells us about the history of life," says Shanan Peters , an assistant professor of geoscience at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
In fact, the fossil record can tell us a great deal, he says in a new study. In a report published Friday, Nov. 25 , he and colleague Bjarte Hannisdal, of the University of Bergen in Norway, show that the evolution of marine life over the past 500 million years has been robustly and independently driven by both ocean chemistry and sea level changes.
The time period studied covered most of the Phanerozoic eon, which extends to the present and includes the evolution of most plant and animal life.
Hannisdal and Peters analyzed fossil data from the Paleobiology Database along with paleoenvironmental proxy records and data on the rock record that link to ancient global climates, tectonic movement, continental flooding, and changes in biogeochemistry, particularly with respect to oxygen, carbon, and sulfur cycles. They used a method called information transfer that allowed them to identify causal relationships — not just general associations — between diversity and environmental proxy records.
"We find an interesting web of connections between these different systems that combine to drive what we see in the fossil record," Peters says. "Genus diversity carries a very direct and strong signal of the sulfur isotopic signal. Similarly, the signal from sea level, how much the continents are covered by shallow seas, independently propagates into the history of marine animal diversity."
The dramatic changes in biodiversity seen in the fossil record at many different timescales — including both proliferations and mass extinctions as marine animals diversified, evolved, and moved onto land — likely arose through biological responses to changes in the global carbon and sulfur cycles and sea level through geologic time.
The strength of the interactions also shows that the fossil record, despite its incompleteness and the influence of sampling, is a good representation of marine biodiversity over the past half-billion years.
"These results show that the number of species in the oceans through time has been influenced by the amount and availability of carbon, oxygen and sulfur, and by sea level," says Lisa Boush, program director in the National Science Foundation’s Division of Earth Sciences , which funded the research. "The study allows us to better understand how modern changes in the environment might affect biodiversity today and in the future."
Peters says the findings also emphasize the interconnectedness of physical, chemical, and biological processes on Earth.
"Earth systems are all connected. It’s important to realize that because when we perturb one thing, we’re not just affecting that one thing. There are consequences throughout the whole Earth system," he says. "The challenge is understanding how perturbation of one thing — for example, the carbon cycle — will eventually affect the future biodiversity of the planet."
Last job offers
- Agronomy - 22.5
Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiter/in Koordination Agrar-Umweltindikatoren - Social Sciences - 21.5
wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin/ wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter - Electroengineering - 21.5
Sektionsleiter/in - Electroengineering - 21.5
Elektroingenieur/in FH - Life Sciences - 17.5
Hochschulabsolventen (m/w) Fachrichtungen Biologie, Mikrobiologie, Bio-Informatik... - Pedagogy - 15.5
Doktorand/in Erziehungswissenschaften - Computer Science - 23.5
Associate Professor / Senior Lecturer in Human-Computer Interaction with specialization in Visualization... - Physics - 23.5
Professor in experimental materials physics - Literature - 23.5
Professur für italienische und französische Literaturwissenschaft im FB 05 - Romanisches Seminar - Literature - 23.5
Professur für italienische und französische Sprachwissenschaft im Fachbereich Philosophie und Philologie... - Earth Sciences - 22.5
Chair in Human Geography - GEO004A - History - 22.5
Departmental Lecturer - Business - 23.5
Full, Assoc, or Asst. Professor in Marketing - Medicine - 22.5
Assistant or Associate Professor of Microbiology & Immunobiology





» Share this page: