Published April 27, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Individual to Community-Level Faunal Responses to Environmental Change from a Marine Fossil Record of Early Miocene Global Warming

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

Modern climate change has a strong potential to shift earth systems and biological communities into novel states that have no present-day analog, leaving ecologists with no observational basis to predict the likely biotic effects. Fossil records contain long time-series of past environmental changes outside the range of modern observation, which are vital for predicting future ecological responses, and are capable of (a) providing detailed information on rates of ecological change, (b) illuminating the environmental drivers of those changes, and (c) recording the effects of environmental change on individual physiological rates. Outcrops of Early Miocene Newport Member of the Astoria Formation (Oregon) provide one such time series. This record of benthic foraminiferal and molluscan community change from continental shelf depths spans a past interval environmental change (∼20.3-16.7 mya) during which the region warmed 2.1–4.5°C, surface productivity and benthic organic carbon flux increased, and benthic oxygenation decreased, perhaps driven by intensified upwelling as on the modern Oregon coast. The Newport Member record shows that (a) ecological responses to natural environmental change can be abrupt, (b) productivity can be the primary driver of faunal change during global warming, (c) molluscs had a threshold response to productivity change while foraminifera changed gradually, and (d) changes in bivalve body size and growth rates parallel changes in taxonomic composition at the community level, indicating that, either directly or indirectly through some other biological parameter, the physiological tolerances of species do influence community change. Ecological studies in modern and fossil records that consider multiple ecological levels, environmental parameters, and taxonomic groups can provide critical information for predicting future ecological change and evaluating species vulnerability.

Files

journal.pone.0036290.pdf

Files (570.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:a59399e6631c399ff4b6bdd7f073a074
546.7 kB Preview Download
md5:c5abc3ec4a05a0fd7a67c9d65fab1224
23.4 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0036290
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10688

Funding

National Science Foundation
0910026
Cushman Foundation
William V. Sliter award
Conchologists of America
Research Award
Sigma Xi
Grants-in-Aid of Research
National Science Foundation
Graduate Research Fellowship
Frank H. and Eva B. Buck Foundation

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences