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Global ocean conveyor lowers extinction risk in the deep sea
AbstractGeneral paradigms of species extinction risk are urgently needed as global habitat loss and rapid climate change threaten Earth with what could be its sixth mass extinction. Using the stony coral Lophelia pertusa as a model organism with the potential for wide larval dispersal, we investigated how the global ocean conveyor drove an unprecedented post-glacial range expansion in Earth׳s largest biome, the deep sea. We compiled a unique ocean-scale dataset of published radiocarbon and uranium-series dates of fossil corals, the sedimentary protactinium–thorium record of Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) strength, authigenic neodymium and lead isotopic ratios of circulation pathways, and coral biogeography, and integrated new Bayesian estimates of historic gene flow. Our compilation shows how the export of Southern Ocean and Mediterranean waters after the Younger Dryas 11.6kyr ago simultaneously triggered two dispersal events in the western and eastern Atlantic respectively. Each pathway injected larvae from refugia into ocean currents powered by a re-invigorated AMOC that led to the fastest postglacial range expansion ever recorded, covering 7500km in under 400 years. In addition to its role in modulating global climate, our study illuminates how the ocean conveyor creates broad geographic ranges that lower extinction risk in the deep sea.
- United States Department of the Interior United States
- United States Department of the Interior United States
- University of Oxford United Kingdom
- Heriot-Watt University United Kingdom
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill United States
570, Connectivity, 550, Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, Extinction, Aquatic Science, Larval dispersal, Oceanography, Deep sea, Climate change
570, Connectivity, 550, Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, Extinction, Aquatic Science, Larval dispersal, Oceanography, Deep sea, Climate change
