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Devonian climate, sea level and evolutionary events: an introduction

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a detailed overview of the evolution of the Devonian extinction process and its evolution in the Palaeozoic and show that the extinction process can be viewed in the context of a global event sequence.
Abstract
The face of Planet Earth has changed significantly through geological time. Dynamic processes active today, such as plate tectonics and climate change, have shaped the Earth’s surface and impacted biodiversity patterns from the beginning. Organisms, on the other hand, have the capacity to significantly alter Earth’s hydrological and geochemical cycles, its atmosphere and climate, sediments, and even hard rocks deep down under the surface. Abiotic– biotic interactions characterize Earth’s system history and, together with biotic competition and food webs, were the main trigger of evolutionary change, innovations and biodiversity fluctuations. Within the Palaeozoic, the Devonian was an especially interesting time interval as it was characterized by the ‘mid-Paleozoic predator revolution’ (Signor & Brett 1984; Brett 2003) and the related ‘nekton revolution’ (Klug et al. 2010), characterized by the blooms of free-swimming cephalopods, including the oldest ammonoids, and fish groups (e.g. toothed sharks and giant placoderms), the rise of more advanced vertebrates, including the oldest tetrapods (e.g. Blieck et al. 2007, 2010; Niedzwiedzki et al. 2010), the most extensive reef complexes of the Phanerozoic (e.g. Kiessling 2008), and the ‘greening of land’ by the diversification and spread of land plants, including the oldest forests (e.g. Stein et al. 2012; Giesen & Berry 2013), which resulted in new soil types and changing weathering. These major evolutionary trends did not unfold in a long interval of environmental stability, but in times of numerous and repeated, geologically brief, global events that punctuated prolonged periods, up to several million years in duration, of relative stability, termed ecological-evolutionary subunits (EE subunits: Boucot 1990; Brett & Baird 1995; Brett et al. 2009). The bounding events, even those of lesser intensity, produced major re-structuring in local to global ecosystems and are seen as critical drivers of long-term evolutionary patterns (Brett 2012). These linked abiotic and biotic events and extinctions of different magnitude have been summarized by House (1983, 1985, 2002), Walliser (1984, 1996) and, more recently, by Becker et al. (2012). The Devonian event succession is summarized in Figure 1. Two first-order mass extinctions at the Frasnian–Famennian boundary (Kellwasser Crisis) and at the end of the Devonian (Hangenberg Crisis), characterized by the loss of major fossil groups (classes and orders) and complete ecosystems (e.g. metazoan reefs, early forests), have to be viewed in the context of a complex global event sequence. There are important similarities between discrete pulses/phases of the major biotic crises and individual smaller-scale events. In our understanding, second-order global events are characterized by sudden extinctions in many groups and ecosystems, including the complete disappearance of several widespread and diverse organism groups (orders and families). Examples are the basal Emsian atopus Event, where the planktonic graptolites finally died out, the Taghanic Crisis, Frasnes events and Lower Kellwasser Event. Third-order global events show globally elevated extinction rates, often at lower taxonomic level (genera and species), but within many clades and in several ecosystems. Examples are the Silurian–Devonian boundary Klonk Event, and the Daleje, Chotěc, Kacak, Condroz and Annulata events. Fourth-order global extinctions refer to the sudden disappearance of relatively fewer but widespread groups, which implies a global, not regional, trigger. This category may include the Lochkovian–Pragian boundary

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Devonian Period

Mary O'Donoghue
- 07 Nov 2005 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

A volcanic scenario for the Frasnian–Famennian major biotic crisis and other Late Devonian global changes: More answers than questions?

TL;DR: In this article, an updated volcanic press-pulse model is proposed with reference to the recent timing of LIPs and arc magmatism and the revised date of 371.9 Ma for the F-F boundary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age correlation of Large Igneous Provinces with Devonian biotic crises

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the record of large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) against the timing of Devonian biotic crises that are well recorded in the numerous anoxia events throughout this period.
References
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BookDOI

Global events and event stratigraphy in the Phanerozoic

TL;DR: The existence of rapid and even catastrophic turnover within the Phanerozoic ecosystems has been discussed at length over the years as discussed by the authors, and this discussion has become even more intensive after the hypothesis of Alvarez, explaining the end-Cretaceous mass extinction as the result of a huge asteroid impact on the Earth.
Book ChapterDOI

Global Events in the Devonian and Carboniferous

TL;DR: In this article, Devonian and Carboniferous global events are described and their magnitude ranges from short-termed geo-events without major biotic changes up to highest order mass-extinctin events.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strength, timing, setting and cause of mid-Palaeozoic extinctions

TL;DR: A recent analysis of family extinction data, largely based on The Fossil Record 2, but updated in some respects, supersedes the data base of Raup and Sepkoski as mentioned in this paper and shows that the Famennian has the highest total family extinction of marine taxa, with the Givetian in second and Frasnian in third place.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mid-Paleozoic precursor to the Mesozoic marine revolution

TL;DR: The mid-Paleozoic radiation of durophages and response of the marine fauna was in many respects similar to events of the Mesozoic Marine Revolution, in effect, the Paleozoic precursor to that event.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlation of mid-Palaeozoic ammonoid evolutionary events with global sedimentary perturbations

TL;DR: This paper found that eight ammonoid extinction events occurring within 30 million years seem to be correlated with sedimentary changes in global sea level and temperature, and these evolutionary patterns may be regarded as a bioseismograph reflecting events causing environmental change.
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