The geographic ranges of marine organisms, including planktonic foraminifera, diatoms, dinoflagellates, copepods and fish, are shifting polewards owing to anthropogenic climate change. However, the extent to which species will move and whether these poleward range shifts represent precursor signals that lead to extinction is unclear. Understanding the development of marine biodiversity patterns over geological time and the factors that influence them are key to contextualizing these current trends. The fossil record of the macroperforate planktonic foraminifera provides a rich and phylogenetically resolved dataset that provides unique opportunities for understanding marine biogeography dynamics and how species distributions have responded to ancient climate changes. Here we apply a bipartite network approach to quantify group diversity, latitudinal specialization and latitudinal equitability for planktonic foraminifera over the past eight million years using Triton, a recently developed high-resolution global dataset of planktonic foraminiferal occurrences. The results depict a global, clade-wide shift towards the Equator in ecological and morphological community equitability over the past eight million years in response to temperature changes during the late Cenozoic bipolar ice sheet formation. Collectively, the Triton data indicate the presence of a latitudinal equitability gradient among planktonic foraminiferal functional groups which is coupled to the latitudinal biodiversity gradient only through the geologically recent past (the past two million years). Before this time, latitudinal equitability gradients indicate that higher latitudes promoted community equitability across ecological and morphological groups. Observed range shifts among marine planktonic microorganisms in the recent and geological past suggest substantial poleward expansion of marine communities even under the most conservative future global warming scenarios.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-05694-5 | DOI Listing |
ISME J
January 2025
Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Education and Integrated Arts and Sciences, Waseda University, Tokyo 169-8050, Japan.
Photosymbiosis, a mode of mixotrophy by algal endosymbiosis, provides key advantages to pelagic life in oligotrophic oceans. Despite its ecological importance, mechanisms underlying its emergence and association with the evolutionary success of photosymbiotic lineages remain unclear. We used planktonic foraminifera, a group of pelagic test-forming protists with an excellent fossil record, to reveal the history of symbiont acquisition among their three main extant clades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
December 2024
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3AN, UK.
Understanding the controls behind the calcification and distribution of planktonic foraminifera in the modern ocean is important when these organisms are used for palaeoceanographic reconstructions. This study combines previously reported shell mass data with new shell geochemistry, light microscopy and X-ray micro-computed tomography analyses to dissect various parameters of shells from surface sediments, investigating the factors influencing their biometry. The goal is to understand which aspects of the marine environment are critical for the calcification and vertical distribution of this species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
December 2024
Department of Climate Geochemistry, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, Germany.
Rising carbon dioxide emissions are provoking ocean warming and acidification, altering plankton habitats and threatening calcifying organisms, such as the planktonic foraminifera (PF). Whether the PF can cope with these unprecedented rates of environmental change, through lateral migrations and vertical displacements, is unresolved. Here we show, using data collected over the course of a century as FORCIS global census counts, that the PF are displaying evident poleward migratory behaviours, increasing their diversity at mid- to high latitudes and, for some species, descending in the water column.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
December 2024
School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Climate change affects marine organisms, causing migrations, biomass reduction and extinctions. However, the abilities of marine species to adapt to these changes remain poorly constrained on both geological and anthropogenic timescales. Here we combine the fossil record and a global trait-based plankton model to study optimal temperatures of marine calcifying zooplankton (foraminifera, Rhizaria) through time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2024
Departamento de Oceanografia - PPG Oceanografia Ambiental - LaboGeo Marine Geosciences, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Avenida Fernando Ferrari 514, Vitória, 29090-600, ES, Brazil.
The paleoenvironmental evolution of the Abrolhos Depression (AD) on the southern Abrolhos Shelf during the global post-Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) transgression is investigated through benthic foraminifera analysis. Downcore sediment samples (core DA03A-5B) collected at a depth of 63 m provide insights into the formation and paleoenvironmental variations of AD over the past 18 kyr BP. The core is divided into four biofacies based on foraminifera assemblages.
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