Mass Extinction Event Caused by Erosion of the Ozone Layer

East Greenland Spores Comparison

Normal and malformed spores from East Greenland. Credit: John Marshall

Researchers at the University of Southampton have shown that an extinction event 360 million years ago, that killed much of the Earth’s plant and freshwater aquatic life, was caused by a brief breakdown of the ozone layer that shields the Earth from damaging ultraviolet (UV) radiation. This is a newly discovered extinction mechanism with profound implications for our warming world today.

There have been a number of mass extinction in the geological past. Only one was caused by an asteroid hitting the Earth, which was 66 million years ago when the dinosaurs became extinct. Three of the others, including the end Permian Great Dying, 252 million years ago, were caused by huge continental-scale volcanic eruptions that destabilized the Earth’s atmospheres and oceans.

Now, scientists have found evidence showing it was high levels of UV radiation which collapsed forest ecosystems and killed off many species of fish and tetrapods (our four-limbed ancestors) at the end of the Devonian geological period, 359 million years ago. This damaging burst of UV radiation occurred as part of one of the Earth’s climate cycles, rather than being caused by a huge volcanic eruption.

The ozone collapse occurred as the climate rapidly warmed following an intense ice age and the researchers suggest that the Earth today could reach comparable temperatures, possibly triggering a similar event. Their findings are published in the journal Science Advances.

Helicopter Leaving Team on Rebild Bakker

Helicopter leaving team on Rebild Bakker, East Greenland. Credit: John Marshall

The team collected rock samples during expeditions to mountainous polar regions in East Greenland, which once formed a huge ancient lake bed in the arid interior of the Old Red Sandstone Continent, made up of Europe and North America. This lake was situated in the Earth’s southern hemisphere and would have been similar in nature to modern-day Lake Chad on the edge of the Sahara Desert.

Other rocks were collected from the Andean Mountains above Lake Titicaca in Bolivia. These South American samples were from the southern continent of Gondwana, which was closer to the Devonian South Pole. They held clues as to what was happening at the edge of the melting Devonian ice sheet, allowing a comparison between the extinction event close to the pole and close to the equator.

Professor John Marshall Collecting Samples in Spitsbergen

Prof John Marshall (left), taking samples in Spitsbergen. Credit: Sarah Wallace-Johnson

Back in the lab, the rocks were dissolved in hydrofluoric acid, releasing microscopic plant spores (like pollen, but from fern-like plants that didn’t have seeds or flowers) which had lain preserved for hundreds of millions of years. On microscopic examination, the scientists found many of the spores had bizarrely formed spines on their surface — a response to UV radiation damaging their DNA. Also, many spores had dark pigmented walls, thought to be a kind of protective ‘tan’, due to increased and damaging UV levels.

The scientists concluded that, during a time of rapid global warming, the ozone layer collapsed for a short period, exposing life on Earth to harmful levels of UV radiation and triggering a mass extinction event on land and in shallow water at the Devonian-Carboniferous boundary.

Following the melting of the ice sheets, the climate was very warm, with the increased heat above continents pushing more naturally generated ozone-destroying chemicals into the upper atmosphere. This lets in high levels of UV-B radiation for several thousand years.

Camp at Summit of Stensio Bjerg

Camp at 1200m on summit of Stensio Bjerg, East Greenland. Credit: John Marshall

Lead researcher Professor John Marshall, of the University of Southampton’s School of Ocean and Earth Science, who is a National Geographic Explorer, comments: “Our ozone shield vanished for a short time in this ancient period, coinciding with a brief and quick warming of the Earth. Our ozone layer is naturally in a state of flux — constantly being created and lost — and we have shown this happened in the past too, without a catalyst such as a continental scale volcanic eruption.”

During the extinction, plants selectively survived, but were enormously disrupted as the forest ecosystem collapsed. The dominant group of armored fish became extinct. Those that survived — sharks and bony fish — remain to this day the dominant fish in our ecosystems.

These extinctions came at a key time for the evolution of our own ancestors, the tetrapods. These early tetrapods are fish that evolved to have limbs rather than fins, but still mostly lived in water. Their limbs possessed many fingers and toes. The extinction reset the direction of their evolution with the post-extinction survivors being terrestrial and with the number of fingers and toes reduced to five.

Camp Site in East Greenland

Camp site in East Greenland. Credit: John Marshall

Professor Marshall says his team’s findings have startling implications for life on Earth today: “Current estimates suggest we will reach similar global temperatures to those of 360 million years ago, with the possibility that a similar collapse of the ozone layer could occur again, exposing surface and shallow sea life to deadly radiation. This would move us from the current state of climate change, to a climate emergency.”

The remote locations visited in East Greenland are very difficult to access, with travel involving light aircraft capable of landing directly on the tundra. Transport within the vast field area was by inflatable boats equipped with outboard motors, all of which had to fit in the small aircraft.

All field logistics was organized by CASP, an independent charitable trust based in Cambridge specializing in remote geological fieldwork. Mike Curtis, Managing Director of CASP says: “We have a history of assisting research geologists such as John Marshall and colleagues to access remote field areas and we are particularly pleased that their research has proved to have such potentially profound implications.”

Reference: “UV-B radiation was the Devonian-Carboniferous boundary terrestrial extinction kill mechanism” by John E. A. Marshall, Jon Lakin, Ian Troth and Sarah M. Wallace-Johnson, 27 May 2020, Science Advances.
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aba0768

The research was funded in part by a grant from the National Geographic Society.

The research was conducted in collaboration with The Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge.

3 Comments on "Mass Extinction Event Caused by Erosion of the Ozone Layer"

  1. Clyde Spencer | May 28, 2020 at 10:09 am | Reply

    An interesting hypothesis, but the summary leaves a number of issues unaddressed. In the absence of stratospheric ozone, ozone will be generated at lower elevations. It will have a shorter half-life, but will continue to be regenerated with high levels of UV. Water, while being most transparent to blue light, actually has strong absorption of UV. Evidence for that is beached whales that get sunburned, despite normally spending considerable time at the surface breathing, and not experiencing the problem despite having only a thin film of water covering their backs. Stratospheric ozone is most effective at removing UV-C. The regular atmosphere removes UV-B, which is why one tends to get sunburned more easily in the mountains than at the sea shore.

    The article claims, “…, the increased heat above continents pushing more naturally generated ozone destroying chemicals into the upper atmosphere.” Just what were these supposed chemicals, and how were they produced? Are the authors proposing that the circulation in the atmosphere was different during the Devonian, and if so, what evidence do they have for that? What evidence is there that the spores were damaged by UV, rather than by a pathogen or the heat?

  2. Read Peter L Ward on youtube

  3. The theory requires an unexplained massive increase in primary marine productivity with the algae releasing oxygen and amounts of methyl chloride so large that they overwhelm the normal amounts reaching the upper middle stratosphere where ClO is supposed to destroy all ozone catalytically and quantitatively. A global Devonian ozone hole? Very doubtful.

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