Colloquium paper: ecological extinction and evolution in the brave new ocean - PubMed
- ️Tue Jan 01 2008
. 2008 Aug 12;105 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):11458-65.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.0802812105. Epub 2008 Aug 11.
Affiliations
- PMID: 18695220
- PMCID: PMC2556419
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0802812105
Colloquium paper: ecological extinction and evolution in the brave new ocean
Jeremy B C Jackson. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008.
Abstract
The great mass extinctions of the fossil record were a major creative force that provided entirely new kinds of opportunities for the subsequent explosive evolution and diversification of surviving clades. Today, the synergistic effects of human impacts are laying the groundwork for a comparably great Anthropocene mass extinction in the oceans with unknown ecological and evolutionary consequences. Synergistic effects of habitat destruction, overfishing, introduced species, warming, acidification, toxins, and massive runoff of nutrients are transforming once complex ecosystems like coral reefs and kelp forests into monotonous level bottoms, transforming clear and productive coastal seas into anoxic dead zones, and transforming complex food webs topped by big animals into simplified, microbially dominated ecosystems with boom and bust cycles of toxic dinoflagellate blooms, jellyfish, and disease. Rates of change are increasingly fast and nonlinear with sudden phase shifts to novel alternative community states. We can only guess at the kinds of organisms that will benefit from this mayhem that is radically altering the selective seascape far beyond the consequences of fishing or warming alone. The prospects are especially bleak for animals and plants compared with metabolically flexible microbes and algae. Halting and ultimately reversing these trends will require rapid and fundamental changes in fisheries, agricultural practice, and the emissions of greenhouse gases on a global scale.
Conflict of interest statement
This paper results from the Arthur M. Sackler Colloquium of the National Academy of Sciences, “In the Light of Evolution II: Biodiversity and Extinction,” held December 6–8, 2007, at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center of the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering in Irvine, CA. The complete program and audio files of most presentations are available on the NAS web site at www.nasonline.org/Sackler_biodiversity.
The author declares no conflict of interest.
Figures

Impact of trawling on the seafloor at ≈18 m depth in the Swan Island Conservation Area, northern Gulf of Maine (42). The straight lines are furrows made by the trawl, and the debris is polychaete worm tubes.

Hypoxia and nitrogen loading in the Gulf of Mexico (44). (A) Annual variations in the size of the hypoxic zone in late July and the nitrate plus nitrite nitrogen loading for the preceding May. (B) Increase in the ratio of the size of the hypoxic zone relative to nitrogen loading the preceding year. The breaks in the curve reflect hurricanes and droughts, but the overall trend is highly significant.

A sporting day's catch of sawfish in the Florida Keys in the 1940s (courtesy of the Monroe County Public Library, Key West, Florida).
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