Physiology and climate change explain unusually high similarity across marine communities after end-Permian mass extinction

Jood A. Al Aswad, Justin L. Penn, Pedro M. Monarrez, Mohamad Bazzi, Curtis Deutsch, Jonathan L. Payne

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Fossil assemblages exhibit a global depletion in taxonomic distinctiveness in the aftermath of the end-Permian mass extinction (~252 million years ago), but little is known about why. Here, we examine whether biotic homo genization can be explained by tropical survivors tracking an expansion of their preferred habitat, measured in terms of the ratio of environmental oxygen supply to metabolic demand. We compare spatial similarity in community composition among marine invertebrate fossils represented by bivalve and gastropod fossils with predictions from an ecophysiological model of habitat that diagnoses areas in the ocean that can sustain the aerobic requirements of marine invertebrates. Modeled biogeographic responses to climate change yield an increase in global similarity of community composition among surviving ecophysiotypes, consistent with patterns in the fossil record and arguing for a physiological control on earliest Triassic biogeography.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbereadr4199
JournalScience Advances
Volume11
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 28 2025

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General

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