HONG KONG: Dominant species spread across the globe are just as vulnerable during a mass extinction event as more fragile ones confined to a single locale, according to a study.
As Earth enters the sixth such concentrated annihilation of life over the last half-billion years, this could be bad news for humans, the researchers say.
The last major wipeout occurred 66 million years ago when a giant asteroid put a relatively quick end to the age of dinosaurs after their spectacular 150 million-year run.
By comparison, humans have been around for about one tenth of one percent of that time.
Outside of these moments of planetary upheaval – each of which decimated 50 to 95 percent of life forms – species tend to disappear at a steady “background” rate that has varied remarkably little.
During the previous big five extinction, however, that rate increased by at least 100-fold.
And that’s about where we are today.
“Rates of extinction amongst modern animal groups are as high, if not higher, than those we see in the fossil records during times of mass extinction,” comments Alexander Dunhill, a professor at the University of Leeds, and lead author of the study.
Most mass die-offs were associated with climate change, itself triggered by some cataclysmic event – a massive, continental-scale rupturing of volcanoes in the case of the Triassic-Jurassic juncture 200 million years ago.
“Organisms are unable to adapt quick enough to rapidly changing conditions and thus become extinct,” Dunhill said.
Looking at the fossil record of land-living animals around the Triassic-Jurassic event – in which 80 percent of species ceased to exist – Dunhill and colleague Matthew Wills asked whether geographically far-flung creatures fared better.
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