4.8 Article

A diverse Ediacara assemblage survived under low-oxygen conditions

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-35012-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA Postdoctoral Program
  2. College of Science Seed Grant Program at George Mason University
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF) Geobiology and Low-Temperature Geochemistry Program grant [2020644, 2020593]
  4. Russian Science Foundation [20-67-46028]
  5. Directorate For Geosciences
  6. Division Of Earth Sciences [2020644, 2020593] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The Ediacaran biota were soft-bodied organisms that lived in marine environments between 574 and 539 million years ago. There are different hypotheses about their taxonomic grouping and metabolism, with some suggesting a metazoan affinity and aerobic metabolism, and others proposing a separate taxonomic group and reliance on chemoautotrophy. A study on Ediacaran fossils from Siberia indicates that these organisms were tolerant of low-oxygen conditions and had the capacity for anaerobic metabolisms.
The Ediacaran biota were soft-bodied organisms, many with enigmatic phylogenetic placement and ecology, living in marine environments between 574 and 539 million years ago. Some studies hypothesize a metazoan affinity and aerobic metabolism for these taxa, whereas others propose a fundamentally separate taxonomic grouping and a reliance on chemoautotrophy. To distinguish between these hypotheses and test the redox-sensitivity of Ediacaran organisms, here we present a high-resolution local and global redox dataset from carbonates that contain in situ Ediacaran fossils from Siberia. Cerium anomalies are consistently >1, indicating that local environments, where a diverse Ediacaran assemblage is preserved in situ as nodules and carbonaceous compressions, were pervasively anoxic. Additionally, delta U-238 values match other terminal Ediacaran sections, indicating widespread marine euxinia. These data suggest that some Ediacaran biotas were tolerant of at least intermittent anoxia, and thus had the capacity for a facultatively anaerobic lifestyle. Alternatively, these soft-bodied Ediacara organisms may have colonized the seafloor during brief oxygenation events not recorded by redox proxy data. Broad temporal correlations between carbon, sulfur, and uranium isotopes further highlight the dynamic redox landscape of Ediacaran-Cambrian evolutionary events. Geochemical data from sedimentary rocks in Siberia indicate that members of the soft-bodied Ediacara biota (the earliest macroscopic life on Earth) were tolerant of low-oxygen conditions, suggesting they had the capacity for anaerobic metabolisms.

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