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Biology library
Course: Biology library > Unit 30
Lesson 3: Threats to biodiversity- Human activities that threaten biodiversity
- Mutation as a source of variation
- Invasive species
- How did all dinosaurs except birds go extinct?
- Were dinosaurs undergoing long-term decline before mass extinction?
- Human impact on ecosystems review
- Introduced species and biodiversity
- How does climate change affect biodiversity?
- Demystifying ocean acidification and biodiversity impacts
- Biodiversity and extinction, then and now
- Threats to biodiversity
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Biodiversity and extinction, then and now
Extinctions may occur because of direct, natural phenomena or the inability of species to adapt quickly enough to changing environmental conditions or ecological interactions. Five major mass extinctions have happened on Earth. A sixth mass extinction is currently underway and is driven by human activity, which underscores the need to learn from the past to safeguard our future.
Want to join the conversation?
- In the first mass extinction, he said Gondwana. Isn't Gondwana the break up of Pangea?(2 votes)
- Gondwana formed Pangea.(2 votes)
- after a extinction, what happens to the animal that eat the animal that went extinct(1 vote)
- usually, animals don't rely on a single species for food, but assuming they do, they would have no food to eat, and go extinct themselves.(2 votes)
- Is there a simple way to remember these?(1 vote)
- would covid be involved in Anthropocene,(0 votes)
- Isn't it likely that the species diversity will increase over millions of years after the Anthropocene extinction due to evolution by natural selection? Won't life recover again, for the sixth time?(0 votes)
- We cannot tell that for sure. Also, who says humand will go extinct before the rest of the species?! Following current trend, humans will stay the only living creatures on Eart (and parasites, mcicroscopic organisms, arthropods, worms).(0 votes)
Video transcript
(gentle music) - [Narrator] Biodiversity
is in crisis today. This much we know. However, extinction, the
human-caused basis of the crisis, can also be a natural phenomenon. Species go extinct for a
variety of natural reasons, like meteor strikes, volcanic eruptions, natural climate shifts,
movements of continents over geological eons, things
that occur all the time without the involvement of humans. Therefore, scientists know
there's a natural background rate of extinction that's
estimated to be somewhere in the neighborhood of one
to five extinctions a year, averaged over geologic time. This background rate
exists because organisms are constantly being confronted
by environmental changes. Some can deal with it, others can't. A major change has the potential
result of an extinction. Even without a direct, natural phenomenon that could kill individuals directly, a species could go extinct
due to its inability to keep up with the
competitors, predators, or parasites that are always influencing its local environment or changing the way that it interacts with its ecosystem. It's now estimated that
the present extinction rate is somewhere between 1000 to 10,000 times the background rate, and we also know the main reason for this. The reason is us. What I'd like to do here is frame this within nothing less
than the entire history of life on earth. Have extinctions of this
magnitude happened before? And what can we learn from that? The answer is yes, there
have been massive extinctions in the past, and we're now experiencing the highest rate of extinction
since the last major mass extinction that occurred
at the end of the Cretaceous, some 65 million years ago. This is the one that a lot of people, especially seven year olds, are familiar with because it
ended the age of dinosaurs. This extinction was
likely caused by effects that occurred after the
impact of a large asteroid, which scientists like to call a bolide. So, when you see the term bolide impact, you can tell your friends that that means, basically, kablooey. Some suggest that the smoking
gun of this bolide impact is a huge crater 15 to 20 kilometers deep, and over 170 kilometers across, buried deeply in sediments
along the Yucatan Peninsula. This crater was made by a bolide
about 10 kilometers across. Events like this leave a physical, detectable mark in Earth's crust. Geologists use markers like this, along with other changes in the rocks, to give special names to specific periods, intervals of geologic time and history bounded by these markers, names like Paleozoic, Cambrian, Carboniferous, Cenozoic. These are names of epochs,
eras, periods, et cetera, in the history of the planet. Scientists ask if we are, right now, making an event that will be detectable millions of years from now
in the geologic record. Some claim that we are, and
that we should be calling this present epoch the Anthropocene, anthro for human, with cene
being the suffix that we use to designate these epochs. So, these scientists
suggest that we signify a special epoch in the
history of the Earth, an epoch marked by a new
type of fossil evidence, such as plastics or
some crusty carbon layer that indicates that we
have left an indelible mark in the geology that will
be preserved for eons. Right now, what can we learn from the past by looking at this big picture history of extinction on Earth? We know that biodiversity is
governed by a balancing act between speciation and extinction. Does biodiversity increase
steadily with time? Has it reached an equilibrium limit? Speciation is caused by
one species splitting to give rise to two new species, each of those giving rise
to two more, and so on. You'd expect the number of
species to increase over time. However, that multiplication
is offset by extinction. If you look at a graph of
biodiversity over the history of our planet, you get
something that looks like this. You can see that there is indeed an overall trend towards an
increase in biodiversity, but you can also mark
certain spots on this curve, here, here, here, here, and here, that indicate significant
drops in biodiversity. These are known as major
mass extinction events, times during which
extraordinarily high numbers of species disappeared, times
when the extinction rate was well above the background rate. It's worth looking at
these because they suggest some interesting and, I
think, relevant reasons for why these extinctions happened, so I want to go into these
in a little bit of detail. The first one, here, occurs at the
Ordovician-Silurian boundary, 440 to 450 million years ago. What on earth can we learn from something that happened so long ago? Well, for one thing, during this time, 60% of marine invertebrate
species died out. These extinctions seemed
to be the result of effects caused by movement of
the huge supercontinent that existed at that time, Gondwana. Sounds like a pretty interesting place, except that it moved slowly
into the south polar region, with a consequent sea level fall as significant amounts of
the planet's precipitation became tied up in snow
and ice on Gondwana, rather than flowing back into the sea, and this change disrupted
marine ecosystems along the continental shelf,
resulting in extinctions, extinctions recorded as another
marker in the fossil record. The second major extinction, here, occurred during the late Devonian period, about 374 million years ago. I'm amazed that scientists
can get that precise, but they can. We now know that 50% of
all the genera on Earth went extinct at this time. Think about that for a moment. We're not talking about species. We're talking about entire genera, and that means a lot of species. There's some thought that this
was due to a bolide impact that occurred long before the one that wiped out the
dinosaurs, but maybe not. Others think maybe it
was oceanic volcanism or some global cooling mechanism that we don't fully understand. Some suggest that it was due
to a drop in speciation rate, rather than an increase
in extinction rate, and clearly, more research is needed here. The third of the big five
extinction events, here, is something that occurred
at the end of the Permian, between the Permian and Triassic periods, about 252 million years ago. This is sometimes known
as The Great Dying, the biggest known extinction event, during which 96% of all marine and 70% of all terrestrial
vertebrates died out. It also appears that it's one
of the few mass extinctions in which insects took a big hit. I guess it takes a lot to
kill all those cockroaches. In total, 83% of all the
genera on earth disappeared. The suggested reasons
behind this mass extinction range all over the map. Some people think it might have been one or more bolide impacts, or volcanism on a huge scale, possibly from a place
called the Siberian Traps, where there were huge outpourings of lava, big fires going on, and all
kinds of horrible things happening to the environment
because of that volcanism. It could also have been a
runaway greenhouse effect triggered by the sudden release of methane from the ocean floor. Methane can be stored by
the activities of bacteria as something called methane clathrates in sediments of the ocean floor. Geologic disturbance
might be able to release these stores of clathrates,
releasing huge amounts of the potent greenhouse gas, methane. Other people think that
there might have been major sea level changes at the time, due to overall climate changes. Increasing anoxic conditions or lack of oxygen in the deep sea, or perhaps shifts in
oceanic circulation patterns could be results of those climate changes, or maybe a hellish convergence
of all these things. I can easily imagine the
volcanism causing earthquakes that would release methane clathrates, and cause oceanic circulation changes, and so on and so forth,
a cascade of disasters. The fourth major extinction occurred at the Triassic-Jurassic
boundary, 201 million years ago. 34% of all marine genera died out, along with a whole bunch of
terrestrial vertebrate groups, clearing the stage for
the rise of the dinosaurs. Hooray. Where would all of our
five to 10 year olds be if it weren't for the
Triassic-Jurassic extinction? Statistical analysis
suggests some complications in figuring out what the story is here, but a drop in speciation, rather than an increase in extinction, might have caused this
drop in biodiversity, too. The fifth and possibly most famous of all the big five extinctions is
the Cretaceous-Paleogene event, 65 to 66 million years
ago, and we know the story. A kablooey, a bolide impact
with dinosaurs dying out in the aftermath, along
with lots of other groups. About 75% of all known
species went extinct, but this was followed by rapid recovery, giving way to what many
scientists refer to as the modern biota, including the rise of mammals, and I think we can learn
something from that, too. Life is amazingly tenacious. For all the delicacy of an
individual or a species, life recovered in impressive ways at least five different times, which leads to a fascinating question. What happens after a mass extinction? What are the contingencies,
as evolutionists call them, that happen when ecosystems
are suddenly opened up by the removal of many species. Who comes next? Who can take advantage of
the changes and the openings, and how fast can all that happen? Those are difficult but very interesting and very relevant scientific questions, so there are lots of people
working on them because, as I like to say, the past
is where you came from. Without knowing where you came from, sometimes you can't
know where you're going, and lots of the extinction
causes I just described should sound a bit familiar, because they bring us back full circle to the beginning of this video in thinking about a sixth mass extinction during the Anthropocene. For the first time in the
entire history of life on earth, there's a mass extinction
happening due to a single species: us. What's gonna happen while this is going on and after it runs it present course? I hate to imagine a world without tigers or blue whales or Sequoias or salmon, giant clams, coral reefs, but without them and the
ecosystems that depend on them, our time is limited. We'll not only be the
cause of a mass extinction, we'll be part of it.