Thursday, August 15, 2013

Was There a Nitrogen Nutrient Limitation in the MesoProterozoic for Eukaryotes?


A test of the nitrogen-limitation hypothesis for retarded eukaryote radiation: Nitrogen isotopes across a Mesoproterozoic basinal profile

Author:

1. Eva E. Stüeken (a)

Affiliation:

a. University of Washington, Department of Earth & Space Sciences and Astrobiology Program, Box 351310, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

Abstract:

Nitrogen limitation caused by trace metal scarcity under euxinic ocean conditions has been proposed as an explanation for the delayed radiation of eukaryotes until at least the late Mesoproterozoic. However, evidence for how the nitrogen cycle was operating during the middle Precambrian is, so far, rare. More specifically, it is unknown which steps in the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle, e.g. nitrogen fixation, nitrification or ammonification, were rate-limiting and thus controlling microbial community structures. The Mesoproterozoic Belt Supergroup in western Montana hosts a variety of facies ranging from shallow to deep water and thus offers the opportunity to address this issue. Bulk δ15N values show a clear trend from −1‰ in the deepest part of the basin to +5‰ along basin margins, which suggests that coastal areas were sufficiently oxygenated for aerobic nitrogen cycling. The total fractionation of carbon isotopes between carbonate and organic carbon (Δ13C) increases from 20‰ to 32‰ in the same direction, possibly indicating an ecological response to redox stratification and nitrogen speciation. Evidence from the Belt Supergroup is thus consistent with the idea that nutrient availability may have restricted early eukaryotic organisms to a narrow range of habitats, which thus prevented a global rise to ecological dominance until concentrations of fixed nitrogen increased in the global open ocean.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The boring billion!

Nitrogen and trace metal limitations do sound plausible. But it's possible that we'll never know why -- just too far away in time.


Doug M.

Will Baird said...

I've heard a plausible explanation: just not enough continent to weather yet.