Tag Archives: Extinction

Can We Predict the Next Mass Extinction?

Asteroid Impact that killed the dinosaurs (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Sixty-six million years ago, a massive asteroid crashed into Earth. The explosion from the impact released energy equivalent to 100 trillion tons of TNT. The mass extinction that occurred afterwards wiped out about 80% of all species at the time, including the dinosaurs. What if there was a way to predict such a catastrophe?

Do Mass Extinctions Follow a Pattern?

In 1984, researchers Raup and Sepkoski compiled data on twelve recent extinction events. Using statistics, they analyzed the data and found that a mass extinction seemed to occur about every 26 million years. This finding led to a torrent of research as scientists sought to replicate and explain this phenomenon.

The Solar System’s Journey through the Milky Way

One of the most prominent explanations were suggested by Rampino and Stothers. They proposed this pattern had something to do with our sun’s movement within the Milky Way galaxy. Just like how the earth revolves around the sun, the sun also revolves around the centre of our spiral galaxy. As the sun orbits, it also oscillates above and below the spiral arm. The gravity within our solar system fluctuates along with this vertical movement.

The sun’s orbit around Milky Way (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

According to Rampino and Stothers, the changes in gravity has an important impact on the Oort Cloud, a cluster of asteroids in the outer reaches of our solar system. When the sun is located right within the galaxy arm, the gravity from this densely packed region disturbs the Oort Cloud. As a result, Oort Cloud comets are deflected into the inner solar system, where any one of them can crash onto Earth, potentially causing a mass extinction similar to the one that killed the dinosaurs.

Oort Cloud (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Counterargument

Equally many scientists have also criticized the existence of the 26-million-year pattern. For example, in his study, John Alroy claimed that the proposed pattern did not agree with data documenting mass extinctions of marine animals. In addition, Bailer-Jones pointed out flaws in Raup and Sepkoski’s statistics. She wrote that there were extinction events in the data that Raup and Sepkoski had omitted from the calculations. Furthermore, she noted the dates of the extinction events were uncertain, which Raup and Sepkoski did not account for. As a result, Bailer-Jones felt that Raup and Sepkoski’s calculations were not significant enough to draw such bold conclusions. Instead, she felt there’s more evidence that mass extinctions are sporadic, caused by multiple factors, including climate change.

Conclusion

The idea that mass extinctions occur at a predictable rate is both terrifying and fascinating. However, scientists are still debating whether such a pattern really exists. In the meantime, we can focus on other causes of mass extinctions. Specifically, ones we can control. Asides from meteor impacts, global warming  is also a major cause of mass extinctions and there’s not need to predict that our planet is warming at an unprecedented rate.

-Written by Helen Hu

Will 2019 Be the Year of the Transgender Fish?

Birth-control pills containing the primary female sex hormone, estrogen, have been highly successful in preventing unwanted pregnancies since the 1960s. As these hormone-containing pills started to become both more readily available and socially accepted in recent years, male fish have suffered the consequences of abnormal levels of estrogen in marine environments, turning them into so-called transgender fish. Exposure to increased levels of estrogen in sexually reproducing male fish can cause them to acquire female traits. The loss of male individuals can have detrimental effects on the marine ecosystem as a whole. As a society, we are impacted by these changes due to the fact that over 3 billion people worldwide rely on seafood, including fish, as their primary source of protein. If species of fish are unable to properly reproduce due to the lack of sexually reproducing males, the entire food-web will be disrupted, directly impacting humans, who lie at the top of the web. Not only will society lose a vital food source, but the third-hand intake of estrogen through the consumption of infected fish will undoubtedly have repercussions on the human body.

Estrogen-containing birth control pills. Source: Flickr Credit: Brianna Laugher

Where Does the Estrogen Come From?

When females take birth-control pills, the synthetic estrogen that is consumed will not stay in the human body forever; it will eventually be excreted through the process of urination. Approximately 68 percent of the original dose of birth control is excreted from the human body every time a pill is consumed. In addition, the disposal of unused, unwanted birth-control down sinks and toilets will contaminate waste-water with abnormal levels of estrogen. When this waste-water gets dumped into marine environments, the female sex hormones will also be washed away into lakes and oceans in relatively high doses, inflicting many unwanted consequences on marine organisms.

Feminizing Male Fish

Many male fish are severely impacted by estrogen-contaminated waters. Source: Wikimedia Commons Credit: Firos ak

When male fish are exposed to increased levels of estrogen in their marine habitats, studies have found that they begin to show many feminine traits, rendering them transgender fish. This includes egg production, a decrease in sperm count, and signs of less aggressive behaviour. Certain studies have found that some male fish have even begun to develop ovaries in place of testes when exposed to estrogen. The entire ecosystem can be impacted by this, as a decrease in sexually reproductive male fish can eventually drive an entire species into extinction. A drop in species diversity can lead to serious ramifications, including an increased susceptibility to disease outbreak.

What Can Be Done?

Waste-water treatment plants can remove estrogen from waste-water early on. Source: Flickr Credit: eutrophication&hypoxia

As the primary and most influential contributor of estrogen to waterways is caused by the disposal of hormone-containing waste-water, better waste-water treatment methods can easily be established to prevent this from continuing to occur. Although this simple fix can make a big difference in the reproductive abilities of male fish, the impacts that estrogen has already had on many organisms can nonetheless be passed on to future generations.

Written by Kelsey Wong

Is Eastern Wolf a Distinct Species?

The top-down regulation of ecosystems requires the action of top carnivorous predators like wolves. However, due to human activities, there has been a large reduction in the number of wolves in North America, which requires our immediate conservation. It is urgent to save endangered species because protecting endangered species like wolves from extinction is protecting ourselves from extinction. To be specific, without wolves in the ecosystem, the conditions of other animals and plants will be disturbed and altered unpredictably, and the disturbance may result in a more wide-spread collapse of species, including human beings.

 

Wolves in Yellow Stone National Park affect many aspects of the ecosystem (credit: National Park service)

 

Eastern wolves, native to North America, are one of the wolves/coyotes that have been disappearing, and are claimed to require protection by the law. The origin of eastern wolves (Canis lycaon) has been the subject of an ongoing debate and controversy. Specifically, while some claimed that eastern wolves are a distinct species, others argued that they are the hybrids from other wolves.

 

Eastern wolf (Canis Lycanon) (credit: Michael Runtz)

 

As the debate proceeds, scientists have found controversial evidence, including morphological and genetic analysis of wolves, giving inconsistent interpretations of the origin of eastern wolves.

 

Different canis types, eastern wolves (second from left) (credit: ScienceNews)

 

According to the law, only endangered species are qualified for protection, while hybrids are not. Therefore, the mysterious origin of eastern wolves creates problem for the government because whether eastern wolves are qualified for protection by law cannot be determined currently.

In conclusion, the most urgent act is for scientists to solve the mystery of the origin of eastern wolves, and then the government can determine whether eastern wolves should be saved as a top predator.