Researching Ancient Oceans
Joe Proudman
(4 min 40 sec)
Everybody has a story to tell. Even a sea urchin or a clam. The tale 5,400 fossilized sea creatures told 嘿嘿视频 marine ecologist Sarah Moffitt was one of abundance, trauma and recovery wrought by thousands of years of climate change, some of it quite abrupt.
, Moffitt showed that while climate change and oxygen loss in the sea can alter ocean ecology very quickly 鈥 within decades 鈥 , not the 100-year scale previously thought.
Study the Oceans
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Students participate in fieldwork and research at the 嘿嘿视频 Bodega Marine Laboratory in Northern California, north of San Francisco.
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鈥淔or me, looking forward for my kid, people in the future are not going to have the same ocean that I have today,鈥 Moffitt said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 actually a place of personal heartbreak. To know that, if we go down a path of unchecked climate warming, these places that are so beautiful, these organisms that are so fascinating, and so bizarre and alien, are not going to be there for my grandkids.鈥
Tree rings of the sea
鈥楩or me, looking forward for my kid, people in the future are not going to have the same ocean that I have today. That鈥檚 actually a place of personal heartbreak.鈥
鈥 Sarah Moffitt
Moffitt, a scientist from and , analyzed invertebrate fossils found within a sediment core from offshore Santa Barbara. The core, essentially a tube of sediment that covers a period between 3,400 and 16,100 years ago, read much like the tree rings of the sea.
It provided a before-and-after snapshot of what happened during the last major deglaciation 鈥 a time of abrupt climate warming, melting polar ice caps and expansion of low oxygen zones in the ocean.
The study, published March 30 in the Early Edition of the journal PNAS, is the first record of disturbance and recovery of seafloor ecosystem biodiversity in response to abrupt climate change. It documents how long it took for recovery of ecosystems to begin, after a dramatic episode of climate change.
What the invertebrate fossils might say
Previous studies reconstructing Earth鈥檚 climatic history through marine sediments primarily relied upon single-celled organisms called foraminifera, and less so on multicellular life, like invertebrates. Moffitt, whose background is in marine ecology, wondered what the invertebrate fossils within the sediments could tell her about the structure of the ocean ecosystem during past periods of climate change.
鈥淎fter the initial sampling at sea, I took the entire core, which was about 30 feet long,鈥 Moffitt said. 鈥淚 cut it up like a cake, and I sampled the whole thing. Because of that, I had the whole record.鈥
The history lesson shown by the sediment core is one of initially abundant, diverse and well-oxygenated seafloor ecosystems, then a period of warming and oxygen loss in the oceans, followed by a rapid loss of diversity. The fossils nearly disappeared from the record during those times of low oxygen.
The study found that oceanic oxygen levels fell by between 0.5 and 1.5 over a period of less than 100 years, showing that relatively minor changes in oxygen levels could result in dramatic changes and reorganizations for seafloor communities.
A unique climate record
鈥業t basically has not ever been done at this scale 鈥 across time scales like this, never in the open ocean.鈥
鈥 Tessa Hill
Co-author and 嘿嘿视频 professor from the and Bodega Marine Laboratory, said such a close examination of the fossilized ocean fauna is rare.
鈥淚t basically has not ever been done at this scale 鈥 across time scales like this, never in the open ocean,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is really a unique climate record from offshore California where you can see in exquisite details what was happening in terms of the ocean temperatures and of the ocean climate system. Then you see the response of these very complex, deep-sea ecosystems to those changes. There鈥檚 really no other record like that.鈥
鈥楪ritty reality鈥
鈥業 took the entire core, which was about 30 feet long. I cut it up like a cake, and I sampled the whole thing. Because of that, I had the whole record.鈥
鈥 Sarah Moffitt
The results suggest that future global climate change may result in similar ecosystem-level effects with millennial-scale recovery periods.
鈥淭hese past events show us how sensitive ecosystems are to changes in Earth鈥檚 climate 鈥 it commits us to thousands of years of recovery,鈥 Moffitt said. 鈥淚t shows us what we鈥檙e doing now is a long-term shift 鈥 there鈥檚 not a recovery we have to look forward to in my lifetime or my grandchildren's lifetime. It鈥檚 a gritty reality we need to face as scientists and people who care about the natural world and who make decisions about the natural world.鈥
The study鈥檚 co-authors include Hill, Peter Roopnarine, curator of Invertebrate Zoology and Geology from the , and professor James Kennett from .
Media Resources
Kat Kerlin, 嘿嘿视频 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu