Space Industry and Business News
EARLY EARTH
Plants that survived dinosaur extinction pulled nitrogen from air
AI illustration only
Plants that survived dinosaur extinction pulled nitrogen from air
by Staff Writers
Durham NC (SPX) Nov 27, 2023

Once a favored food of grazing dinosaurs, an ancient lineage of plants called cycads helped sustain these and other prehistoric animals during the Mesozoic Era, starting 252 million years ago, by being plentiful in the forest understory. Today, just a few species of the palm-like plants survive in tropical and subtropical habitats.

Like their lumbering grazers, most cycads have gone extinct. Their disappearance from their prior habitats began during the late Mesozoic and continued into the early Cenozoic Era, punctuated by the cataclysmic asteroid impact and volcanic activity that mark the K-Pg boundary 66 million years ago. However, unlike the dinosaurs, somehow a few groups of cycads survived to the present.

A new study appearing Nov. 16 in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution has concluded that the cycad species that survived relied on symbiotic bacteria in their roots, which provide them with nitrogen to grow. Just like modern legumes and other plants that use nitrogen fixation, these cycads trade their sugars with bacteria in their roots in exchange for nitrogen plucked from the atmosphere.

What originally interested lead author Michael Kipp is that the tissues of nitrogen-fixing plants can provide a record of the composition of the atmosphere they grew up in. He combines geochemistry with the fossil record to try to understand the Earth's climate history.

Knowing already that modern cycads are nitrogen-fixers, Kipp began analyzing some very old plant fossils during his Ph.D. work at the University of Washington to see if he could get a different look at ancient atmospheres. Most of the old cycads revealed that they weren't nitrogen-fixers, but these also turned out to be the extinct lineages.

"Instead of being a story about the atmosphere, we realized this was a story about the ecology of these plants that changed through time," said Kipp, who spent nearly a decade on this finding, first at UW and then as a postdoctoral researcher at CalTech.

Kipp is joining the Duke faculty this year as an assistant professor of Earth and Climate Sciences in the Nicholas School of the Environment to continue using the fossil record to understand Earth's climate history so that we can understand its possible future.

Much of what we know about ancient atmospheres comes from chemical studies of ancient sea life and sediments, Kipp said. Applying some of those methods to terrestrial plants is a new wrinkle.

"Going into the project, there were no published nitrogen isotope data from fossilized plant foliage," Kipp said. It took a while for him to fine-tune the method and to secure samples of precious plant fossils that museum curators were reluctant to see vaporized to get the data.

"In the few fossil samples that are of surviving (cycad) lineages, and that are not so old - 20, 30 million years - we see the same nitrogen signature as we see today," Kipp said. That means their nitrogen came from symbiotic bacteria. But in the older and extinct cycad fossils, that nitrogen signature was absent.

What is less clear is how nitrogen fixation helped the surviving cycads. It may have helped them weather the dramatic shift in climate or it may have allowed them to compete better with the faster-growing angiosperm plants that flourished after the extinction, "or it could be both."

"This is a new technique that we can do a lot more with," Kipp said.

Funding for this study came from: The Paleontological Society, the University of Washington Royalty Research Fund, and NASA Exobiology grant NNX16AI37G.

Research Report:Nitrogen Isotopes Reveal Independent Origins of N2-Fixing Symbiosis in Extant Cycad Lineages

Related Links
Duke University
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
EARLY EARTH
Recreation of ancient seawater reveals which nutrients shaped the evolution of early life
Oxford UK (SPX) Nov 14, 2023
Scientists know very little about conditions in the ocean when life first evolved, but new research published in Nature Geoscience has revealed how geological processes controlled which nutrients were available to fuel their development. All life uses nutrients such as zinc and copper to form proteins. The oldest lifeforms evolved in the Archean Eon, three and a half billion years before the dinosaurs first appeared. These microbes showed a preference for metals such as molybdenum and manganese co ... read more

EARLY EARTH
Six recycling innovations that could change fashion

'Dolomite Problem': 200-year-old geology mystery resolved

Map highlights environmental and social costs of rare earths extraction

Japan PM says experts to talk in China seafood row

EARLY EARTH
Quantum Space launches Sentry to pioneer deep space communications network

RTX and DARPA to revolutionize Gallium Nitride technology for improved radio frequency sensors

Intelsat's MOTT proves its mettle in US Army's annual NetModX

Intelsat Secures Pioneering SATCOM Managed Service Pilot Contract with US Army

EARLY EARTH
EARLY EARTH
Galileo Second Generation satellite aces first hardware tests

PASSport project testing

Zephr raises $3.5M to bring next-gen GPS to major industries

Satnav test on remote island lab

EARLY EARTH
NASA Scientific Balloons Ready for Flights Over Antarctica

Families of Malaysia Airlines plane crash victims call for new search

Virgin pilots first transatlantic flight with low-carbon fuel

Philippines, Australia launch joint air and sea patrols

EARLY EARTH
US chip curbs trip up China's AI-hungry tech giants

Alibaba cancels cloud service spinoff over US chip restrictions

First 2D semiconductor with 1000 transistors developed at EPFL Switzerland

Atomic dance gives rise to a magnet

EARLY EARTH
AI model estimates state of economy in North Korea, other countries

Sun Yat-sen University develops Globe230k for enhanced land cover monitoring

NASA maps minerals and ecosystem function across US southwest

Satellogic receives NOAA license to expand US Govt business

EARLY EARTH
Air pollution behind over 250,000 deaths in Europe in 2021: agency

Top Panama court strikes down contested mining contract

Experts trash Hong Kong's 'throwaway culture' ahead of plastic ban

Virtual floats reduce waste at Thai festival

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.