Dinosaur
With Two Monster
CLEMSON :
A new study suggests that
algae may have been responsible
for wiping entire species
off the face of the Earth
on at least five occasions.
In the past 540 million
years, five massive extinctions
are thought to have killed
off, in each case, some
50% to 90% of animal species.
Dinosaurs
In River Posters
The study
suggests that toxins from
algae played a major role
in all five extinctions,
including the most recent
and most well-known the
death of the dinosaurs 65
million years ago.
But could
primitive algae really have
taken down the dinosaurs?
Well, the jury is still
out, though some scientists
are skeptical of the algae-killing
idea, saying evidence is
at best lacking and to point
the finger at just one culprit
for one mass extinction,
let alone five, makes little
sense, Livescience reported.
Algae are
simple organisms that get
their energy from the sun
and lack many features found
in plants, like roots and
leaves. Some algae species
produce toxins that are
harmful to other aquatic
organisms and even us. For
instance, one group of algae
called dinoflagellates can
release neurotoxins that
act on nerve cells.
When nutrients
abound, the algae and other
primitive microbes can grow
rapidly and can aggregate
to form dense populations,
known as algae blooms. Such
outbreaks of toxic algae
can have devastating effects
on ecosystems, killing fish,
birds, marine mammals and
even people.
Algae
Kill Off The Mighty Dinosaurs
The most problematic
group of toxin-producers
are cyanobacteria. While
cyanobacteria are not technically
algae – they were
reclassified from algae
to bacteria – they
can produce their own energy
from the sun, and some researchers
still place them in the
algae group.
Clemson University
researchers James Castle
and John Rodgers wanted
to find out if such algal
blooms that are harmful
today could have posed a
threat millions of years
ago and possibly contributed
to extinctions.
First, they
did a literature search,
turning up reports of an
increase in fossilized stromatolites,
or dome-shaped rocks with
layers of cyanobacteria
known as “microbial
mats,” during four
out of five of the mass
extinctions.
Then, the
team compared the structure
of modern-day cyanobacteria
with ancient cyanobacteria,
finding the species had
not changed much over millions
of years. “Since they’ve
changed very little in their
structure, and they make
toxins today, we propose
that they did so in the
past,” said Castle.
While they
didn’t find an increase
in fossilized algae at the
time of the dinosaur extinction,
the authors suggest that
another form of algae, one
that doesn’t leave
fossils behind, could have
contributed to that extinction.
The so-called planktonic
algae, which produces toxins
in the soil, could have
found its way into the animals’
diets. The toxins can also
become airborne, providing
another way to poison species.
The new hypothesis
does not single out algae
as the only extinction factor,
said Castle. Instead, they
view the algae as what they
call a “kill mechanism,”
a way for environmental
change to contribute to
increased death.