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Reduction in animal abundance and oxygen availability during and after the end-Triassic mass extinction
Authors:Pulkit Singh  Wanyi Lu  Zunli Lu  Adam B Jost  Kimberly Lau  Aviv Bachan  Bas van de Schootbrugge  Jonathan L Payne
Institution:1. Department of Geological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA;2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, USA

Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA;3. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, USA;4. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;5. Department of Geosciences and Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, Penn State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA;6. Ericsson, Santa Clara, California, USA;7. Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands

Abstract:The end-Triassic biodiversity crisis was one of the most severe mass extinctions in the history of animal life. However, the extent to which the loss of taxonomic diversity was coupled with a reduction in organismal abundance remains to be quantified. Further, the temporal relationship between organismal abundance and local marine redox conditions is lacking in carbonate sections. To address these questions, we measured skeletal grain abundance in shallow-marine limestones by point counting 293 thin sections from four stratigraphic sections across the Triassic/Jurassic boundary in the Lombardy Basin and Apennine Platform of western Tethys. Skeletal abundance decreased abruptly across the Triassic/Jurassic boundary in all stratigraphic sections. The abundance of skeletal organisms remained low throughout the lower-middle Hettangian strata and began to rebound during the late Hettangian and early Sinemurian. A two-way ANOVA indicates that sample age (p < .01, η2 = 0.30) explains more of the variation in skeletal abundance than the depositional environment or paleobathymetry (p < .01, η2 = 0.15). Measured I/Ca ratios, a proxy for local shallow-marine redox conditions, show this same pattern with the lowest I/Ca ratios occurring in the early Hettangian. The close correspondence between oceanic water column oxygen levels and skeletal abundance indicates a connection between redox conditions and benthic organismal abundance across the Triassic/Jurassic boundary. These findings indicate that the end-Triassic mass extinction reduced not only the biodiversity but also the carrying capacity for skeletal organisms in early Hettangian ecosystems, adding to evidence that mass extinction of species generally leads to mass rarity among survivors.
Keywords:faunal abundance  mass extinction  ocean redox  skeletal abundance  Triassic–Jurassic extinction
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