TY - JOUR
T1 - Did the amalgamation of continents drive the end Ordovician mass extinctions?
AU - Mac Ørum Rasmussen, Christian
AU - Harper, David Alexander Taylor
N1 - Times Cited: 0 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS AMSTERDAM Article 859LJ English Cited References Count: 356 Rasmussen, C. M. O Univ Copenhagen, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, Ctr Macroecol Evolut & Climate, Oster Voldgade 5-7, DK-1350 Copenhagen K, Denmark
PY - 2011/10/15
Y1 - 2011/10/15
N2 - Global biodiversity has been punctuated throughout the Phanerozoic by extinction events that vary in their degree of intensity and devastation. The mass extinction event that occurred at the end of the Ordovician Period rapidly removed a wide range of species. Because taxonomic loss occurred during an ice age, this is believed to have initiated the extinctions and thus, these extinctions have often been viewed as a deep time analogue to the loss in species diversity during the present day glacial interval. The current study, however, indicates that temperature - though arguably being a trigger - was not the sole reason for the crisis. Based on a large, bibliographic database of rhynchonelliform brachiopods that specifically operates within very narrow time-slices where every locality has been precisely georeferenced for the Upper Ordovician-Lower Silurian interval, we show that the extinctions were not uniformly distributed, nor was the succeeding recovery. Here we argue that changing plate tectonic configurations during the Ordovician-Silurian interval may have exerted a primary control on biotic extinction and recovery. In particular the proximity and ultimate loss of microcontinents and associated smaller terranes around Laurentia may have restricted shelf and slope habitats during the latest Ordovician but, nevertheless, in a contracted Iapetus Ocean, provided migration routes to help drive a diachronous early Silurian recovery. The conclusion that plate tectonics was a primary factor controlling the extent of the extinctions and the subsequent diversity rebound, demonstrates that a reduction in γ-diversity was perhaps the most important manifestation of the end Ordovician crisis and further raises the question whether this could be applied to other large Phanerozoic perturbations in biodiversity levels.
AB - Global biodiversity has been punctuated throughout the Phanerozoic by extinction events that vary in their degree of intensity and devastation. The mass extinction event that occurred at the end of the Ordovician Period rapidly removed a wide range of species. Because taxonomic loss occurred during an ice age, this is believed to have initiated the extinctions and thus, these extinctions have often been viewed as a deep time analogue to the loss in species diversity during the present day glacial interval. The current study, however, indicates that temperature - though arguably being a trigger - was not the sole reason for the crisis. Based on a large, bibliographic database of rhynchonelliform brachiopods that specifically operates within very narrow time-slices where every locality has been precisely georeferenced for the Upper Ordovician-Lower Silurian interval, we show that the extinctions were not uniformly distributed, nor was the succeeding recovery. Here we argue that changing plate tectonic configurations during the Ordovician-Silurian interval may have exerted a primary control on biotic extinction and recovery. In particular the proximity and ultimate loss of microcontinents and associated smaller terranes around Laurentia may have restricted shelf and slope habitats during the latest Ordovician but, nevertheless, in a contracted Iapetus Ocean, provided migration routes to help drive a diachronous early Silurian recovery. The conclusion that plate tectonics was a primary factor controlling the extent of the extinctions and the subsequent diversity rebound, demonstrates that a reduction in γ-diversity was perhaps the most important manifestation of the end Ordovician crisis and further raises the question whether this could be applied to other large Phanerozoic perturbations in biodiversity levels.
KW - Ordovician
KW - Silurian
KW - Brachiopods
KW - Mass extinction
KW - Migration-origination rates
KW - gamma-Diversity
KW - Habitat loss
KW - Continental amalgamation
KW - FOLIOMENA FAUNA BRACHIOPODA
KW - EARLY SILURIAN BRACHIOPODS
KW - OSLO-ASKER DISTRICT
KW - CHU-ILI RANGE
KW - ANTICOSTI ISLAND
KW - LATEST-ORDOVICIAN
KW - EASTERN CANADA
KW - MIDDLE ORDOVICIAN
KW - SOUTH CHINA
KW - CARADOC BRACHIOPODS
U2 - 10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.07.029
DO - 10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.07.029
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0031-0182
VL - 311
SP - 48
EP - 62
JO - Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology - An International Journal for the Geo-Sciences
JF - Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology - An International Journal for the Geo-Sciences
IS - 1-2
ER -