18 research outputs found
Latest Cretaceous climatic and environmental change in the South Atlantic region
Latest Maastrichtian climate change caused by Deccan volcanism has been invoked as a cause of mass extinction at the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary (~66.0 Ma). Yet late Maastrichtian climate and ecological changes are poorly documented, in particular on the Southern Hemisphere. Here we present upper Maastrichtian-lower Danian climate and biotic records from the Bajada del Jagüel (BJ) shelf site (Neuquén Basin, Argentina), employing the TEX86 paleothermometer, marine palynology (dinoflagellate cysts), and micropaleontology (foraminifera). These records are correlated to the astronomically tuned Ocean Drilling Program Site 1262 (Walvis Ridge). Collectively, we use these records to assess climatic and ecological effects of Deccan volcanism in the Southern Atlantic region. Both the TEX86-based sea surface temperature (SST) record at BJ and the bulk carbonate δ18O-based SST record of Site 1262 show a latest Maastrichtian warming of ~2.5-4°C, at 450 to 150 kyr before the K-Pg boundary, coinciding with the a large Deccan outpouring phase. Benthic foraminiferal and dinocyst assemblage changes indicate that this warming resulted in enhanced runoff and stratification of the water column, likely resulting from more humid climate conditions in the Neuquén Basin. These climate conditions could have been caused by an expanding and strengthening thermal low over the South American continent. Biotic changes in response to late Maastrichtian environmental changes are rather limited, when compared to the major turnovers observed at many K-Pg boundary sites worldwide. This suggests that environmental perturbations during the latest Maastrichtian warming event were less severe than those following the K-Pg boundary impact
Genetic Engineering of Glycinebetaine Production toward Enhancing Stress Tolerance in Plants: Metabolic Limitations
Glycinebetaine (betaine) affords osmoprotection in bacteria, plants and animals, and protects cell components against harsh conditions in vitro. This and a compelling body of other evidence have encouraged the engineering of betaine production in plants lacking it. We have installed the metabolic step for oxidation of choline, a ubiquitous substance, to betaine in three diverse species, Arabidopsis, Brassica napus, and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), by constitutive expression of a bacterial choline oxidase gene. The highest levels of betaine in independent transgenics were 18.6, 12.8, and 13 μmol g(−1) dry weight, respectively, values 10- to 20-fold lower than the levels found in natural betaine producers. However, choline-fed transgenic plants synthesized substantially more betaine. Increasing the choline supplementation further enhanced betaine synthesis, up to 613 μmol g(−1) dry weight in Arabidopsis, 250 μmol g(−1) dry weight in B. napus, and 80 μmol g(−1) dry weight in tobacco. These studies demonstrate the need to enhance the endogenous choline supply to support accumulation of physiologically relevant amounts of betaine. A moderate stress tolerance was noted in some but not all betaine-producing transgenic lines based on relative shoot growth. Furthermore, the responses to stresses such as salinity, drought, and freezing were variable among the three species
Deccan volcanism linked to the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary mass extinction: New evidence from ONGC wells in the Krishna-Godavari basin
A scientific challenge is to assess the role of Deccan volcanism in the
Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary (KTB) mass extinction. Here we report on
the stratigraphy and biologic effects of Deccan volcanism in eleven deep
wells from the Krishna-Godavari (K-G) Basin, Andhra Pradesh, India. In
these wells, two phases of Deccan volcanism record the world's largest
and longest lava mega-flows interbedded in marine sediments in the K-G
Basin about 1500 km from the main Deccan volcanic province. The main
phase-2 eruptions (similar to 80% of total Deccan Traps) began in C29r
and ended at or near the KTB, an interval that spans planktic
foraminiferal zones CF1-CF2 and most of the nannofossil Micula prinsii
zone, and is correlative with the rapid global warming and subsequent
cooling near the end of the Maastrichtian. The mass extinction began in
phase-2 preceding the first of four mega-flows. Planktic foraminifera
suffered a 50% drop in species richness. Survivors suffered another
50% drop after the first mega-flow, leaving just 7 to 8 survivor
species. No recovery occurred between the next three mega-flows and the
mass extinction was complete with the last phase-2 mega-flow at the KTB.
The mass extinction was likely the consequence of rapid and massive
volcanic CO(2) and SO(2) gas emissions, leading to high continental
weathering rates, global warming, cooling, acid rains, ocean
acidification and a carbon crisis in the marine environment.
Deccan volcanism phase-3 began in the early Danian near the C29R/C29n
boundary correlative with the planktic foraminiferal zone P1a/P1b
boundary and accounts for similar to 14% of the total volume of Deccan
eruptions, including four of Earth's longest and largest mega-flows. No
major faunal changes are observed in the intertrappeans of zone P1b,
which suggests that environmental conditions remained tolerable,
volcanic eruptions were less intense and/or separated by longer time
intervals thus preventing runaway effects. Alternatively, early Danian
assemblages evolved in adaptation to high-stress conditions in the
aftermath of the mass extinction and therefore survived phase-3
volcanism. Full marine biotic recovery did not occur until after Deccan
phase-3. These data suggest that the catastrophic effects of phase-2
Deccan volcanism upon the Cretaceous planktic foraminifera were a
function of both the rapid and massive volcanic eruptions and the highly
specialized faunal assemblages prone to extinction in a changing
environment. Data from the K-G Basin indicates that Deccan phase-2 alone
could have caused the KTB mass extinction and that impacts may have had
secondary effects