The geologic history of primary productivity.

Curr Biol

Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, 7610001 Rehovot, Israel.

Published: November 2023

The rate of primary productivity is a keystone variable in driving biogeochemical cycles today and has been throughout Earth's past. For example, it plays a critical role in determining nutrient stoichiometry in the oceans, the amount of global biomass, and the composition of Earth's atmosphere. Modern estimates suggest that terrestrial and marine realms contribute near-equal amounts to global gross primary productivity (GPP). However, this productivity balance has shifted significantly in both recent times and through deep time. Combining the marine and terrestrial components, modern GPP fixes ≈250 billion tonnes of carbon per year (Gt C year). A grand challenge in the study of the history of life on Earth has been to constrain the trajectory that connects present-day productivity to the origin of life. Here, we address this gap by piecing together estimates of primary productivity from the origin of life to the present day. We estimate that ∼10-10 Gt C has cumulatively been fixed through GPP (≈100 times greater than Earth's entire carbon stock). We further estimate that 10-10 cells have occupied the Earth to date, that more autotrophs than heterotrophs have ever existed, and that cyanobacteria likely account for a larger proportion than any other group in terms of the number of cells. We discuss implications for evolutionary trajectories and highlight the early Proterozoic, which encompasses the Great Oxidation Event (GOE), as the time where most uncertainty exists regarding the quantitative census presented here.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.09.040DOI Listing

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