Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California - Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA, 95064, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Apr;23(4):1477-1485. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13484. Epub 2016 Sep 13.
Multistressor global change, the combined influence of ocean warming, acidification, and deoxygenation, poses a serious threat to marine organisms. Experimental studies imply that organisms with higher levels of activity should be more resilient, but testing this prediction and understanding organism vulnerability at a global scale, over evolutionary timescales, and in natural ecosystems remain challenging. The fossil record, which contains multiple extinctions triggered by multistressor global change, is ideally suited for testing hypotheses at broad geographic, taxonomic, and temporal scales. Here, I assess the importance of activity level for survival of well-skeletonized benthic marine invertebrates over a 100-million-year-long interval (Permian to Jurassic periods) containing four global change extinctions, including the end-Permian and end-Triassic mass extinctions. More active organisms, based on a semiquantitative score incorporating feeding and motility, were significantly more likely to survive during three of the four extinction events (Guadalupian, end-Permian, and end-Triassic). In contrast, activity was not an important control on survival during nonextinction intervals. Both the end-Permian and end-Triassic mass extinctions also triggered abrupt shifts to increased dominance by more active organisms. Although mean activity gradually returned toward pre-extinction values, the net result was a permanent ratcheting of ecosystem-wide activity to higher levels. Selectivity patterns during ancient global change extinctions confirm the hypothesis that higher activity, a proxy for respiratory physiology, is a fundamental control on survival, although the roles of specific physiological traits (such as extracellular pCO or aerobic scope) cannot be distinguished. Modern marine ecosystems are dominated by more active organisms, in part because of selectivity ratcheting during these ancient extinctions, so on average may be less vulnerable to global change stressors than ancient counterparts. However, ancient extinctions demonstrate that even active organisms can suffer major extinction when the intensity of environmental disruption is intense.
多压力全球变化,即海洋变暖、酸化和脱氧的综合影响,对海洋生物构成了严重威胁。实验研究表明,活动水平较高的生物应该更有弹性,但在全球范围内、在进化时间尺度上以及在自然生态系统中检验这一预测并了解生物脆弱性仍然具有挑战性。化石记录包含了多次由多压力全球变化引发的灭绝事件,非常适合在广泛的地理、分类和时间尺度上检验假说。在这里,我评估了在包含四次全球变化灭绝事件(二叠纪至侏罗纪)的 1 亿年时间跨度内,活动水平对骨骼良好的底栖海洋无脊椎动物生存的重要性,这四次灭绝事件包括二叠纪末和三叠纪末大灭绝。基于包含摄食和运动的半定量评分,更活跃的生物在四次灭绝事件中的三次(瓜达卢普期、二叠纪末和三叠纪末)中更有可能存活下来。相比之下,在非灭绝期间,活动并不是生存的重要控制因素。二叠纪末和三叠纪末大灭绝也引发了更活跃的生物占主导地位的突然转变。尽管平均活动水平逐渐恢复到灭绝前的值,但最终结果是生态系统整体活动水平永久提高。古全球变化灭绝期间的选择性模式证实了这样一种假设,即更高的活动水平,作为呼吸生理的代表,是生存的基本控制因素,尽管特定生理特征(如细胞外 pCO2 或有氧范围)的作用无法区分。现代海洋生态系统主要由更活跃的生物主导,部分原因是这些古代灭绝事件中的选择性棘轮作用,因此与古代相比,现代海洋生态系统平均可能对全球变化压力源的敏感性较低。然而,古代灭绝事件表明,即使是活跃的生物,在环境破坏强度剧烈时,也可能遭受重大灭绝。