白垩纪末期植物灭绝:异质性、生态系统转变和对未来的见解

P. Wilf, M. Carvalho, E. Stiles
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引用次数: 3

摘要

白垩纪-古近纪(K-Pg)大灭绝在地质上是瞬间发生的,造成了地球历史上最剧烈的灭绝速度。66.02 Ma的希克苏鲁伯撞击造成的物种迅速消失和环境破坏,使K-Pg成为与今天预计的“第六次”大灭绝最具可比性的过去事件。众所周知,这次灭绝灭绝了动物和浮游生物的主要分支。然而,对于陆地植物来说,损失主要发生在区域研究中观察到的物种之间,而在科或主要进化枝水平上没有留下全球痕迹,这导致了是否存在重大的K-Pg植物灭绝的问题。我们回顾了来自美洲的新出现的古植物学数据,并认为证据强烈支持深度(通常>50%),地理上异质性的物种损失和恢复与大灭绝一致。这种异质性似乎反映了几个因素,包括与撞击地点的距离以及撞击冬季的海洋和纬度缓冲。随之而来的转变影响了所有的陆地生命,包括被子植物在世界森林中的真正统治地位,新热带雨林生物群系的高度多样化的诞生,以及导致许多冠状被子植物枝的进化辐射。虽然最坏的结果仍然是可以避免的,但第六次大灭绝可能会反映出K-Pg事件,在地质瞬间消灭了相当数量的植物物种,使陆地生态系统变得贫瘠并最终改变,同时对全球植物科多样性几乎没有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The end-Cretaceous plant extinction: Heterogeneity, ecosystem transformation, and insights for the future
The Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) mass extinction was geologically instantaneous, causing the most drastic extinction rates in Earth’s History. The rapid species losses and environmental destruction from the Chicxulub impact at 66.02 Ma made the K–Pg the most comparable past event to today’s projected “sixth” mass extinction. The extinction famously eliminated major clades of animals and plankton. However, for land plants, losses primarily occurred among species observed in regional studies but left no global trace at the family or major-clade level, leading to questions about whether there was a significant K–Pg plant extinction. We review emerging paleobotanical data from the Americas and argue that the evidence strongly favors profound (generally >50%), geographically heterogeneous species losses and recovery consistent with mass extinction. The heterogeneity appears to reflect several factors, including distance from the impact site and marine and latitudinal buffering of the impact winter. The ensuing transformations have affected all land life, including true angiosperm dominance in the world’s forests, the birth of the hyperdiverse Neotropical rainforest biome, and evolutionary radiations leading to many crown angiosperm clades. Although the worst outcomes are still preventable, the sixth mass extinction could mirror the K–Pg event by eliminating comparable numbers of plant species in a geologic instant, impoverishing and eventually transforming terrestrial ecosystems while having little effect on global plant-family diversity.
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