Lecture 34- Are we living in a time of mass extinction? Flashcards
Are we living in a time of mass extinction?
-yes (probably)
What do our big brains struggle with?
- uncertainty and risk, leading to alarmism or a false sense of security
- some people say the rate of extinction is really bad and some say it is fine
- often people are too confident about their ideas
What does the fossil record say?
- extremely unreliable as a source of information due to the fact that some things conserve well and others don’t
- shells conserve well, large bones not so well, animals in swamps well in dry areas not so well
What were the previous extinctions in history?
- pleistocene (0.01 mya): large mammals and birds
- Cretaceous (65 mya): ruling reptiles (dinosaurs), many marine species including many foraminiferans and mollusks
- Triasic: (180 mya) 35 % of animal families, including many reptiles and marine mollusks
- Permian: (250 mya) 50% of animal families, including over 95% of marine species, many trees, amphibians, most bryozoans and brachiopods, all trilobites
- Devonian (345 mya): 30% of animal families, including agnathan and placoderm fishes and many trilobites
- Ordovician (500 mya): 30% of animal families, including many trilobites
How many species that existed in history are extinct?
-95-99%
When do most extinctions occur?
- between mass events
- and have uncertain causes: a) dinosaurs (meteorite?)
b) pleistocene megafauna: -N. America, N. Zealand, Aus= humans and climate?
What do we need to recognize in trying to compare the extinction rate in the geological past with that of today?
The metric needs to recognise that:
• the number of species getting about in the geological past was different to today
• observations made from the fossil record occur over long time periods (relative to observations of current extinction)
How do you calculate the rate of extinctions per million years?
number of extinctions/ number of speceis x 1000 000/number of observation years
What are some of the uncertainties that we have to account for?
- the number of recorded extinct species
- if use the constant you skew the story, as the rate of extinction is not constant
- also recorded= only few people before 1900 would record this
Which animal group is hit the hardest?
- seems like mammals but we don’t have much info on the other groups particularly invertebrates
- have little information about number of invertebrates so very unreliable estimate
What is the problem with definition of extinction? (creates uncertainty)
- the definition of extinction, if set the bar too low= then an overestimate
- if set too high= underestimate
- the definition at this time might underestimate the number of species going extinct
- the bar is high
- The death of the last individual of a species is difficult to observe. So should species be considered extant until it is certain that they are extinct, or vice versa.
What is the definition of extinction?
Australian EPBC Act (1999)
-there is no reasonable doubt that the last member of
the species has died
What is the lazarus effect?
- animals thought extinct and rediscovered
- e.g. leadbeater’s possum, mountain pygmy possum, parma wallaby, dibbler, new holland mouse, sandhill dunnart, gilbert’s potaroo
How many species are there today?
-About 1.6 million species have been catalogued in museums and herbaria….but this a mere fraction of the number of species thought to exist
What are the techniques that try to estimate the number of species?
- Species-effortcurves
- Samples from rain forest canopies
- Guess-work