Terrestrial-marine teleconnections in the Devonian: links between the evolution of land plants, weathering processes, and marine anoxic events
Open Access
- 29 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 353 (1365) , 113-130
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1998.0195
Abstract
The Devonian Period was characterized by major changes in both the terrestrial biosphere, e.g. the evolution of trees and seed plants and the appearance of multi–storied forests, and in the marine biosphere, e.g. an extended biotic crisis that decimated tropical marine benthos, especially the stromatoporoid–tabulate coral reef community. Teleconnections between these terrestrial and marine events are poorly understood, but a key may lie in the role of soils as a geochemical interface between the lithosphere and atmosphere/hydrosphere, and the role of land plants in mediating weathering processes at this interface. The effectiveness of terrestrial floras in weathering was significantly enhanced as a consequence of increases in the size and geographic extent of vascular land plants during the Devonian. In this regard, the most important palaeobotanical innovations were (1) arborescence (tree stature), which increased maximum depths of root penetration and rhizoturbation, and (2) the seed habit, which freed land plants from reproductive dependence on moist lowland habitats and allowed colonization of drier upland and primary successional areas. These developments resulted in a transient intensification of pedogenesis (soil formation) and to large increases in the thickness and areal extent of soils. Enhanced chemical weathering may have led to increased riverine nutrient fluxes that promoted development of eutrophic conditions in epicontinental seaways, resulting in algal blooms, widespread bottomwater anoxia, and high sedimentary organic carbon fluxes. Long–term effects included drawdown of atmospheric pCO2and global cooling, leading to a brief Late Devonian glaciation, which set the stage for icehouse conditions during the Permo–Carboniferous. This model provides a framework for understanding links between early land plant evolution and coeval marine anoxic and biotic events, but further testing of Devonian terrestrial–marine teleconnections is needed.Keywords
This publication has 109 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Chemical Weathering and Sorting on the Petrogenesis of Siliciclastic Sediments, with Implications for Provenance StudiesThe Journal of Geology, 1996
- Paleoweathering of Mississippian Monteagle Limestone preceding development of a lower Chesterian transgressive systems tract and sequence boundary, middle Tennessee and northern AlabamaGSA Bulletin, 1994
- The separate and combined effects of temperature, soilpCO2, and organic acidity on silicate weathering in the soil environment: Formulation of a model and resultsGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1994
- Inorganic Nutrient and Carbon Controlled Bacterioplankton Growth in the Baltic SeaEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 1993
- Possibility of chemical weathering before the advent of vascular land plantsNature, 1993
- Traces and related chemical changes in a Late Ordovician paleosol,Glossifungitesichnofacies, southern Appalachians, USAIchnos, 1991
- The global Frasnian-Famennian »Kellwasser Event«International Journal of Earth Sciences, 1991
- Early land plantsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1985
- The earliest seedsNature, 1981
- Carbon isotopes as indicators of dispersal patterns in Devonian-Mississippian shales of the Appalachian BasinGeology, 1981