Top predators endured after end-Permian mass extinction

The end-Permian extinction, which occurred 252 million years ago, eliminated over 80 percent of marine species, yet many ocean ecosystems maintained complex structures with top predators surviving. A new study of seven global marine sites reveals that despite severe losses, five ecosystems retained at least four trophic levels. This suggests ecosystems' resilience depends on their unique species compositions, offering insights for modern climate threats.

The end-Permian extinction, dated to about 252 million years ago, stands as the most severe mass extinction on record. Triggered by massive volcanic eruptions in present-day Siberia, it caused global warming, ocean deoxygenation, and other environmental stresses that wiped out over 80 percent of marine species. Entire groups, including trilobites and eurypterids (sea scorpions), vanished, while others endured heavy tolls. In the recovery phase, new lineages emerged, such as dinosaurs and ichthyosaurs.

Prior assumptions held that such devastation would simplify ecosystems by stripping away higher trophic levels, leaving basic food webs reliant on primary producers like photosynthesising organisms, herbivores, and limited predators. However, researchers led by Baran Karapunar at the University of Leeds challenged this view. Their analysis examined fossil remains from seven marine ecosystems worldwide, spanning periods just before and after the extinction, to reconstruct food web structures.

The study, detailed in a bioRxiv preprint (DOI: 10.64898/2026.02.24.707709) and not yet peer-reviewed, found that species losses reached up to 96 percent in some areas, yet five of the seven ecosystems preserved at least four trophic levels throughout. Herbivores, often slow-moving and seabed-dwelling, suffered the greatest declines, particularly in polar regions. In contrast, mobile swimmers like fish fared better.

Post-extinction recovery varied by latitude. Tropical zones saw dominance by low-trophic-level seabed herbivores, while higher latitudes gained complexity as predatory fish migrated equatorward to evade heat, adding trophic layers.

Peter Roopnarine at the California Academy of Sciences praised the work's scope: “I am not aware of any other study that’s pulled so many regions together.” He concurred that trophic levels often persisted, aligning with prior smaller studies, but noted limitations in the models. For instance, all photosynthesising organisms were grouped together due to the fossil record's incompleteness, potentially overlooking extinction impacts on them. “They are ground-truthed by the fossil record, but the fossil record is incomplete,” Roopnarine said.

These findings imply that contemporary marine ecosystems might similarly vary in responses to human-induced climate change and related pressures, based on their distinct species mixes.

Articoli correlati

Researchers at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology have revealed how squid and cuttlefish survived the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction by retreating to oxygen-rich deep-sea refuges. Their analysis of newly sequenced genomes shows these cephalopods originated in the deep ocean over 100 million years ago, followed by rapid diversification into shallow waters. The findings, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, provide the first comprehensive evolutionary tree for decapodiform cephalopods.

Riportato dall'IA

Researchers have uncovered evidence that octopuses from the Late Cretaceous period, around 100 million years ago, grew to lengths of nearly 20 meters and hunted as top predators. The findings, based on well-preserved fossil jaws from Japan and Vancouver Island, challenge previous views of early octopus evolution. Professor Yasuhiro Iba of Hokkaido University led the study, published in Science on April 23.

Newly examined fossils indicate that the earliest four-limbed vertebrates developed directly into adults without a larval phase featuring external gills.

Riportato dall'IA

Scientists suggest that asteroid impacts created hot, chemical-rich environments that could have kick-started life on Earth. A new review led by recent Rutgers graduate Shea Cinquemani highlights impact-generated hydrothermal systems as potential cradles for life's building blocks. These systems may have persisted for thousands of years, providing ideal conditions for early biology.

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta