The Eocene Thermal Maximum 3: Reading the environmental perturbations at Gubbio (Italy)

Author(s):  
Fabrizio Frontalini ◽  
Rodolfo Coccioni ◽  
Rita Catanzariti ◽  
Luigi Jovane ◽  
Jairo F. Savian ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeyang Liu ◽  
Xiehua Ji ◽  
Wenyan Luo ◽  
Yujie Hu ◽  
Haoran Liu

Abstract The Palaeocene–Eocene thermal maximum is a global warming period (~ 56 Ma), which is marked by a sharp negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE) that caused by the injection of massive isotopically-light carbon into the ocean-atmosphere. It is often considered that the carbon injection caused global warming. However, several studies have suggested that warming and environmental perturbations precede the onset of the CIE. Here we present Granger test to investigate the detailed mechanisms of this event. We show a shift from climate-warming driving carbon-emission scenario to a scheme in which carbon-injection causing global-warming during the CIE. The initial carbon emission might be from methane hydrates dissociation and/or permafrost thawing, possibly linked with astronomical paced warming. This change of causal direction may result from the warming feedback of the emitted carbon and additional carbon from other sources, such as volcanism, bolide impact, oxidation of marine organic matter, and wildfires burning peatlands.


2019 ◽  
pp. 155-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Beltran

Environmental temperature has fitness consequences on ectotherm development, ecology and behaviour. Amphibians are especially vulnerable because thermoregulation often trades with appropriate water balance. Although substantial research has evaluated the effect of temperature in amphibian locomotion and physiological limits, there is little information about amphibians living under extreme temperature conditions. Leptodactylus lithonaetes is a frog allegedly specialised to forage and breed on dark granitic outcrops and associated puddles, which reach environmental temperatures well above 40 ˚C. Adults can select thermally favourable microhabitats during the day while tadpoles are constrained to rock puddles and associated temperature fluctuations; we thus established microhabitat temperatures and tested whether the critical thermal maximum (CTmax) of L. lithonaetes is higher in tadpoles compared to adults. In addition, we evaluated the effect of water temperature on locomotor performance of tadpoles. Contrary to our expectations, puddle temperatures were comparable and even lower than those temperatures measured in the microhabitats used by adults in the daytime. Nonetheless, the CTmax was 42.3 ˚C for tadpoles and 39.7 ˚C for adults. Regarding locomotor performance, maximum speed and maximum distance travelled by tadpoles peaked around 34 ˚C, approximately 1 ˚C below the maximum puddle temperatures registered in the puddles. In conclusion, L. lithonaetes tadpoles have a higher CTmax compared to adults, suggesting a longer exposure to extreme temperatures that lead to maintain their physiological performance at high temperatures. We suggest that these conditions are adaptations to face the strong selection forces driven by this granitic habitat.


Geology ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 28 (10) ◽  
pp. 927-930 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Röhl ◽  
T.J. Bralower ◽  
R.D. Norris ◽  
G. Wefer

Author(s):  
Hassan Khozyem ◽  
◽  
Thierry Adatte ◽  
André Mbabi Bitchong ◽  
Yoann Chevalier ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brittany N. Hupp ◽  
◽  
D. Clay Kelly ◽  
James C. Zachos ◽  
Timothy J. Bralower

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