It Took Earth Ten Million Years to
Recover from Greatest Mass Extinction
ScienceDaily
It took some 10 million years for Earth to recover from
the greatest mass extinction of all time, latest research has revealed.
Life was nearly wiped out 250
million years ago, with only 10 per cent of plants and animals surviving. It is
currently much debated how life recovered from this cataclysm, whether quickly
or slowly.
Recent evidence for a rapid
bounce-back is evaluated in a new review article by Dr Zhong-Qiang Chen, from
the China University of Geosciences in Wuhan ,
and Professor Michael Benton from the University of Bristol .
They find that recovery from the crisis lasted some 10 million years, as
explained May 27 in Nature
Geoscience.
There were apparently two reasons
for the delay, the sheer intensity of the crisis, and continuing grim
conditions on Earth after the first wave of extinction.
The end-Permian crisis, by far the
most dramatic biological crisis to affect life on Earth, was triggered by a
number of physical environmental shocks -- global warming, acid rain, ocean
acidification and ocean anoxia. These were enough to kill off 90 per cent of
living things on land and in the sea.
Dr Chen said: "It is hard to
imagine how so much of life could have been killed, but there is no doubt from
some of the fantastic rock sections in China and elsewhere round the world that
this was the biggest crisis ever faced by life."
Current research shows that the
grim conditions continued in bursts for some five to six million years after
the initial crisis, with repeated carbon and oxygen crises, warming and other
ill effects.
Some groups of animals on the sea
and land did recover quickly and began to rebuild their ecosystems, but they
suffered further setbacks. Life had not really recovered in these early phases
because permanent ecosystems were not established.
Professor Benton, Professor of
Vertebrate Paleontology at the University
of Bristol , said:
"Life seemed to be getting back to normal when another crisis hit and set
it back again. The carbon crises were repeated many times, and then finally
conditions became normal again after five million years or so."
Finally, after the environmental
crises ceased to be so severe, more complex ecosystems emerged. In the sea, new
groups, such as ancestral crabs and lobsters, as well as the first marine
reptiles, came on the scene, and they formed the basis of future modern-style
ecosystems.
Professor Benton added: "We
often see mass extinctions as entirely negative but in this most devastating
case, life did recover, after many millions of years, and new groups emerged.
The event had re-set evolution.
However, the causes of the killing -- global
warming, acid rain, ocean acidification -- sound eerily familiar to us today. Perhaps
we can learn something from these ancient events."