Mass extinction 252 million years ago was caused by a 'toxic soup' and we are ...

Mass extinction 252 million years ago was caused by a 'toxic soup' and we are ...
Mass extinction 252 million years ago was caused by a 'toxic soup' and we are ...

Earth experienced its worst mass extinction about 252 million years ago that was caused by a 'toxic soup' - and scientists warn humans today are 'following this same recipe.'

The deadly concoction was a mix of accelerated greenhouse gas emissions, high temperatures and abundant nutrients, but the new study now identifies toxic microbial blooms as a fourth culprit.

A team at the University of Connecticut found the three 'ingredients' led to a rise in microscopic algae and cyanobacteria that inhibited the recovery of freshwater ecosystems 'for perhaps millions of years.'

This is because blooms deplete free oxygen and release toxins into the water that would typically feed vegetation, soil and wildlife.

Researchers say there is 'a lot of parallels to today' with the increase in temperature at the end of the Permian coincided with massive increases in forest fires, which is currently happening in California.

Tracy Frank, head of the department of geosciences, said in a statement: 'We're seeing more and more toxic algae blooms in lakes and in shallow marine environments that's related to increases in temperature and changes in plant communities which are leading to increases in nutrient contributions to freshwater environments.'

The toxic soup was a mix of accelerated greenhouse gas emissions, high temperatures and abundant nutrients, but the new study now identifies toxic microbial blooms as a fourth culprit

The toxic soup was a mix of accelerated greenhouse gas emissions, high temperatures and abundant nutrients, but the new study now identifies toxic microbial blooms as a fourth culprit

The end of the Permian mass extinction, or the 'Great Dying,' killed nine out of every 10 species on the planet

The study, published in Nature Communications, notes that when volcanic eruptions caused an acceleration in greenhouse gases and a dramatic spike in temperatures.

This led to deforestation that caused soil to bleed nutrients into bodies of water and feed microbes that formed the giant toxic blooms.

The team determined this by studying fossils, sediment and chemical records of rocks near Sydney, Australia.

Researchers say there is 'a lot of parallels to today' with the increase in temperature at the end of the Permian coincided with massive increases in forest fires, which is currently happening in California (pictured)

Researchers say there is 'a lot of parallels to today' with the increase in temperature at the end of the Permian coincided with massive increases in forest fires, which is currently happening in California (pictured)

And when the team compared the fossil records of different warming-related mass extinctions, they found extremely similar fossil records.

'This implicates deadly microbial blooms as repeat offenders of freshwater extinctions during extreme warming events,' the team shared in the press release.

Tracy Frank, head of the department

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