AI Article Synopsis

  • The role of oxygen in the evolution of early animals, particularly the Ediacara biota, is debated due to conflicting geochemical evidence regarding ocean oxygen levels during their rise and decline.
  • Fossil evidence suggests that the Ediacara biota diversified after a significant ocean oxygenation event, the Shuram negative C-isotope Excursion, but there's contradictory data about oxygen levels during that time.
  • New research analyzing uranium isotope variations from multiple locations indicates a major shift in ocean oxygen levels, suggesting that global marine redox changes influenced the biodiversity of the Ediacara biota throughout its existence.*

Article Abstract

The role of O in the evolution of early animals, as represented by some members of the Ediacara biota, has been heavily debated because current geochemical evidence paints a conflicting picture regarding global marine O levels during key intervals of the rise and fall of the Ediacara biota. Fossil evidence indicates that the diversification the Ediacara biota occurred during or shortly after the Ediacaran Shuram negative C-isotope Excursion (SE), which is often interpreted to reflect ocean oxygenation. However, there is conflicting evidence regarding ocean oxygen levels during the SE and the middle Ediacaran Period. To help resolve this debate, we examined U isotope variations (δ U) in three carbonate sections from South China, Siberia, and USA that record the SE. The δ U data from all three sections are in excellent agreement and reveal the largest positive shift in δ U ever reported in the geologic record (from ~ -0.74‰ to ~ -0.26‰). Quantitative modeling of these data suggests that the global ocean switched from a largely anoxic state (26%-100% of the seafloor overlain by anoxic waters) to near-modern levels of ocean oxygenation during the SE. This episode of ocean oxygenation is broadly coincident with the rise of the Ediacara biota. Following this initial radiation, the Ediacara biota persisted until the terminal Ediacaran period, when recently published U isotope data indicate a return to more widespread ocean anoxia. Taken together, it appears that global marine redox changes drove the rise and fall of the Ediacara biota.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6899691PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12359DOI Listing

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