• About
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Write for us
Today Headline
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • POLITICS
  • FINANCE
  • Video
  • ENTERPRISE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • LIFESTYLE
    • TRAVEL
    • HEALTH
  • AUTOMOTIVE
  • SPORTS
  • Write for us
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • POLITICS
  • FINANCE
  • Video
  • ENTERPRISE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • LIFESTYLE
    • TRAVEL
    • HEALTH
  • AUTOMOTIVE
  • SPORTS
  • Write for us
No Result
View All Result
TodayHeadline
No Result
View All Result
Home Technology

The science behind extinction – ScienceBlog.com

December 30, 2020
in Technology
0
The science behind extinction – ScienceBlog.com
0
SHARES
11
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


An estimated 8 million animal and plant species live on planet Earth. But extinction rates are accelerating. Gorillas, gazelles, frogs, rhinos and whales are among the species now critically endangered, and human activities present the biggest threat.

In mass extinctions, a huge portion of the planet’s species die off over thousands or even millions of years – a geological blink. Scientists have identified five of these events in fossil data going back roughly half a billion years.

Scientists who study past extinction events can find clues about not only the evolution of life on Earth, but also about the effects of extreme changes in our planet’s atmosphere, and how life finds ways to rebound. Stanford scientists and colleagues have uncovered evidence, for example, that the biggest extinction in Earth’s history was caused by global warming that left ocean animals unable to breath.

Other research, coauthored by Stanford geophysicist Sonia Tikoo-Schantz, suggests the crater from the giant asteroid impact linked to the dinosaur extinction some 66 million years ago may have provided niches for life.

“The fossil record is our only archive of past extinction events,” Stanford paleobiologist Jonathan Payne has said. It allows researchers to examine directly which biological traits tend to lead to higher extinction risk under different circumstances, whether in the wake of an asteroid impact or volcanic eruption, or amid global warming.

Many scientists say a sixth mass extinction is now under way. In 2019, following a review of thousands of scientific and government sources, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services reported that approximately 1 million animal and plant species are threatened with extinction. According to the report, more than 40 percent of amphibian species, nearly 33 percent of sharks, shark relatives and reef-forming corals, and upwards of 33 percent of all marine mammals are threatened.

Even parasites are under threat. Up to one-third of the world’s parasite species could go extinct within a few decades – potentially opening new niches for other, invasive parasites to exploit. And losses can snowball. As Stanford biologist Paul Ehrlich and colleagues wrote in a recent study suggesting the extinction rate is likely much higher than previously thought, “Extinction breeds extinction.”

When species vanish, benefits to humanity can be lost, too – from economic opportunities related to ecotourism to keeping in check populations of species that can spread infectious disease. The UN report estimated that as much as $577 billion in annual global crops are now at risk from loss of pollinators. The consequences do not fall equally across society. The areas projected to see some of the worst negative effects from biodiversity loss and related changes to ecosystem functions are also home to many of the globe’s poorest communities as well as large concentrations of Indigenous peoples.

This collection covers how scientists are deciphering the mysteries and mechanisms of extinction and survival in Earth’s deep past and painting an increasingly detailed picture of life now at the brink.

Scroll down for extinction research news and insights spanning the future of our own species; the disappearance of our hominid relatives and why the Neanderthals’ fate could have been ours; expanding knowledge of past extinctions; the root causes and ripple effects of the Earth’s ongoing biodiversity crisis; and connections between extinctions and pandemics.



Source link

 
 
   
Previous Post

Pierre Cardin, iconic ‘space-age’ fashion designer, dead at 98

Next Post

Driver arrested over Monash Freeway crash earlier this week

Next Post
Driver arrested over Monash Freeway crash earlier this week

Driver arrested over Monash Freeway crash earlier this week

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Pregnant schoolgirl stabbed to death by teen boyfriend for not aborting his baby

Pregnant schoolgirl stabbed to death by teen boyfriend for not aborting his baby

March 7, 2021
Mum gives birth to 10lb 8oz baby after massive pregnancy bump looked like twins

Mum gives birth to 10lb 8oz baby after massive pregnancy bump looked like twins

March 8, 2021
HEALTH NOTES: One in two Britons claim they are clueless about what sort of food is healthy

HEALTH NOTES: One in two Britons claim they are clueless about what sort of food is healthy

March 6, 2021
Biden says $1,400 stimulus checks will start being sent ‘this month’

Biden says $1,400 stimulus checks will start being sent ‘this month’

March 7, 2021

M&S Bank to shut all current accounts and in-store branches | Money

March 6, 2021
‘Canberra culture’ prober Kate Jenkins doubts courts are up to task

‘Canberra culture’ prober Kate Jenkins doubts courts are up to task

March 8, 2021
Grant Thornton adds two directors to Cardiff office

Grant Thornton adds two directors to Cardiff office

March 8, 2021
“Floyd Would Never Let Him Close to Me”- Regis Prograis Claps Back at Gervonta Davis

“Floyd Would Never Let Him Close to Me”- Regis Prograis Claps Back at Gervonta Davis

March 8, 2021
George Floyd: Derek Chauvin murder trial begins

George Floyd: Derek Chauvin murder trial begins

March 8, 2021
At Dubai airport, travelers’ eyes become their passports

At Dubai airport, travelers’ eyes become their passports

March 8, 2021

About Us

Todayheadline the independent news and topics discovery
A home-grown and independent news and topic aggregation . displays breaking news linking to news websites all around the world.

Follow Us

Latest News

‘Canberra culture’ prober Kate Jenkins doubts courts are up to task

‘Canberra culture’ prober Kate Jenkins doubts courts are up to task

March 8, 2021
Grant Thornton adds two directors to Cardiff office

Grant Thornton adds two directors to Cardiff office

March 8, 2021
‘Canberra culture’ prober Kate Jenkins doubts courts are up to task

‘Canberra culture’ prober Kate Jenkins doubts courts are up to task

March 8, 2021
Grant Thornton adds two directors to Cardiff office

Grant Thornton adds two directors to Cardiff office

March 8, 2021
“Floyd Would Never Let Him Close to Me”- Regis Prograis Claps Back at Gervonta Davis

“Floyd Would Never Let Him Close to Me”- Regis Prograis Claps Back at Gervonta Davis

March 8, 2021
  • About
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Write for us

© 2019 All rights are reserved Todayheadline

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie policy (EU)
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Video
  • Write for us

© 2019 All rights are reserved Todayheadline