'Great
Dying:' Ancient Mass Extinction May Have Been Fueled By Nickel-Eating
Bacteria, Methane
Nickel-eating
bacteria may have worsened the world's worst mass die-off by
producing huge amounts of methane, a new study suggests.
12
May, 2012
The
study is the latest attempt to explain how most of the world's ocean
species died off in just a few hundred thousand years at the end of
the Permian era, about 250 million years ago. The researchers
presented their findings Tuesday (Dec. 4) here at the annual meeting
of the American Geophysical Union.
The
study proposes that a series of steps caused the mass extinction, but
that bacteria played a key role. First, massive
volcanic activity in Siberia
released nickel into the atmosphere, which somehow reached the ocean.
As a result, populations of ocean-dwelling bacteria that use nickel
in their metabolic pathway exploded, releasing huge amounts of
methane into the atmosphere and depleting ocean oxygen levels as a
byproduct of that metabolism. Because methane is a greenhouse gas,
the catastrophic gas release trapped heat in the atmosphere and
caused the mass extinction
by making the climate uninhabitable.
But
while the findings are intriguing, many of the steps in this process
are speculative, said Anthony Cohen, a researcher at the Open
University in the United Kingdom, who was not involved in the study.
[Wipe
Out: History's Most Mysterious Extinctions]
"There
are a lot of assumptions you have to make," Cohen told
LiveScience.
For
instance, it's not clear how the huge nickel deposited in lava flows
in Siberia could have made it into seawater around the globe, he
said.
The
Great Dying
During
"The
Great Dying,"
up to 90 percent of the world's species perished. Though no one knows
exactly how the mass die-off occurred, fossil records suggest gradual
changes like ocean acidification and lessening atmospheric and
oceanic oxygen first killed off species slowly, and cataclysmic
volcanic
eruptions
or asteroid impacts then quickly wiped out the vast majority of life.
Another
theory holds that vast troves of the greenhouse gas methane, which
are normally trapped beneath the seafloor, were released from the
ocean rapidly, causing apocalyptic levels of global warming.
Methane
explosion
But
just what caused that massive methane release remained a mystery.
Daniel Rothman, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, and his colleagues wondered whether ocean-dwelling
bacteria that churn out methane were the culprits.
His
team found through genetic analysis that bacteria called
methanosarcina evolved the ability to break down nickel and make
methane as part of its metabolism about 251 million years ago. The
bacteria may have exploded in population, thereby releasing the
ocean's vast methane reserves. And because the bacteria add an oxygen
molecule to methane during metabolism, an exponential rise in
methanosarcina may have catastrophically depleted ocean oxygen
levels.
But
in order for methanosarcina to rapidly reproduce, the population
would need a huge source of nickel.
Volcanoes
fuel extinction
Around
the same time, cataclysmic volcanic activity at the
Siberian Traps
in Norilsk, Russia, spewed up to 2.7 million square miles (7 million
square kilometers) of nickel-rich lava.
"The
worlds largest nickel deposits are in Siberia," Rothman said
during the AGU conference. "They are there as a result of
Siberian volcanism around 252 million years ago." [Watch
Live: Latest News from 2012 AGU Meeting]
So
the bonanza of nickel needed to spur a population explosion in
methanosarcina likely came from the Siberian Traps. If that's the
case, then catastrophic volcanoes and methane-making bacteria may
have combined to cause the world's worst extinction event.
Though
many of the study's proposed causes for the end Permian extinction
are familiar, it does provide a new timeline of events, Cohen said.
"Quite
a lot of the ideas have been around for a long time. It's just
putting them together."
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