Rechercher dans ce blog

Monday, December 20, 2021

Deadliest period in Earth's history was also the stinkiest - Phys.org

Deadliest period in Earth's history was also the stinkiest
UC Riverside Earth system modeler Dominik Hülse reacting to the toxic scent of hydrogen sulfide. Credit: Dominik Hülse/UCR

Tiny microbes belching toxic gas helped cause—and prolong—the biggest mass extinction in Earth's history, a new study suggests.

Generally, scientists believe Siberian volcanos spitting primarily drove the mass extinction event about 250 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period. The gases caused extreme warming, which in turn led 80% of all , as well as many land species, to go extinct.

Until now, scientists could not explain exactly how the heat caused those deaths. A new UC Riverside-led study in Nature Geoscience shows that the heat accelerated microbes' metabolisms, creating deadly conditions.

"After oxygen in the ocean was used up to decompose , microbes started to 'breathe' sulfate and produced hydrogen sulfide, a gas that smells like rotten eggs and is poisonous to animals," said UC Riverside Earth system modeler Dominik Hülse.

As ocean photosynthesizers—the microbes and plants that form the base of the food chain—rotted, other microbes quickly consumed the oxygen and left little of it for larger organisms. In the absence of oxygen, microbes consumed sulfate then expelled toxic, reeking hydrogen sulfide, or H2S, creating an even more extreme condition called euxinia. These conditions were sustained by the release of nutrients during decomposition, promoting the production of more organic material which helped to maintain this stinky, toxic cycle.

"Our research shows the entire ocean wasn't euxinic. These conditions began in the deeper parts of the ," Hülse said. "As temperatures increased, the euxinic zones got larger, more toxic, and moved up the water column into the shelf environment where most lived, poisoning them."

The expanding euxinic zones can be detected through chemical signatures in sediment samples.

Oxygen depletion is a problem that persists today and is bound to get worse under future climate change. Euxinic waters can be found in places like Los Angeles County's 16-mile-long Dominguez Channel, into which a September 2021 warehouse fire released ethanol. The ethanol killed vegetation in the channel, which decayed and got consumed by microbes. They then produced at . Thousands in breathing range of the reeking river reported vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, insomnia, headaches, sneezing, and other symptoms.

Lessons from the ancient world may be important for understanding the processes that are challenging our modern oceans and waterways.

"It would be speculative to superimpose the ancient mass extinction event on today's planet," Hülse said. "However, the study does show us that the ocean's response to higher carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere may be underestimated."


Explore further

Animals died in 'toxic soup' during Earth's worst mass extinction: A warning for today

More information: Dominik Hülse et al, End-Permian marine extinction due to temperature-driven nutrient recycling and euxinia, Nature Geoscience (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41561-021-00829-7

Citation: Deadliest period in Earth's history was also the stinkiest (2021, December 20) retrieved 20 December 2021 from https://ift.tt/30LyJuI

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Adblock test (Why?)

Article From & Read More ( Deadliest period in Earth's history was also the stinkiest - Phys.org )
https://ift.tt/3H2aTui
Science

No comments:

Post a Comment

Search

Featured Post

NASA's Europa Clipper probe deploys 1st science instruments en route to Jupiter - Space.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content] NASA's Europa Clipper probe deploys 1st science instruments en route to Jupiter    Space.com G...

Postingan Populer