生物扰动
地质学
生物地球化学循环
海洋学
海底扩张
生物集群灭绝
底栖区
自生的
碳循环
沉积物
有机质
沉积岩
生态学
生态系统
地球化学
古生物学
化学
环境化学
生物扩散
人口学
社会学
生物
人口
作者
Brian Beaty,William J. Foster,Valentin Zuchuat,Spencer R. Moller,Stella Z. Buchwald,Hannah L. Brooks,Sofia Rauzi,Terry T. Isson,Sverre Planke,Francisco J. Rodrı́guez-Tovar,Kim Senger,Noah J. Planavsky,Lidya G. Tarhan
摘要
ABSTRACT During the end‐Permian mass extinction, a global decline in seafloor sediment mixing and burrowing (bioturbation) provides critical evidence for the collapse of marine ecosystems, likely triggered by rapid ocean warming and deoxygenation. However, the decline and subsequent recovery of bioturbation after the extinction event may not only have been a symptom of environmental change but also a driver, influencing nutrient exchange and reductant burial across the sediment–water interface and thus water column oxygen availability and seafloor habitability more broadly. Here we test this hypothesis through combined analyses of bioturbation and sedimentary geochemistry, focusing on marine siliciclastic records of the Permian–Triassic transition from Svalbard. We find that total organic carbon, total sulfur, and organic phosphorus decrease with increasing bioturbation intensity, whereas inorganic reactive phosphorus phases (authigenic and iron oxide‐bound phosphorus) increase. These differences are most strongly associated with biodiffusion (particle mixing) rather than bioirrigation (solute exchange). Our findings suggest that bioturbation primarily influenced sediment chemistry by enhancing organic matter oxidation, in contrast to some modern settings where downward mixing may promote organic matter preservation within the anoxic portion of seafloor sediments. The early return of shallow‐tier bioturbators in this region < 200 kyr after the extinction event likely promoted a rapid restoration of efficient carbon and sulfur cycling within benthic ecosystems. In contrast, efficient phosphorus burial via sink‐switching may not have resumed until deeper‐tier bioturbators achieved pre‐extinction levels of sediment mixing > 1 Myr after the mass extinction.
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