A new study published in Ecology and evolution by Henrik Svensmark of DTU Space has shown that exploding stars, also known as supernovae, have greatly affected the diversity of marine life over the past 500 million years.
The fossil record has been studied extensively, revealing great differences in the diversity of life forms throughout geological history. The fundamental question in evolutionary biology is to identify the processes responsible for these fluctuations.
The new research makes a surprising discovery: fluctuation in the number of nearby supernovae corresponds closely with changes in the biodiversity of marine species over the past 500 million years. This association becomes apparent when the marine diversity curve is adjusted to account for changes in shallow coastal marine areas, which are important because they provide a habitat for most marine life and provide new opportunities for evolution with expansion or contraction. Thus, changes in available shallow marine areas play a role in shaping biodiversity.
“One possible explanation for the supernovae diversity link is that supernovae affect Earth’s climate,” says Henrik Svensmark, author of the paper and senior researcher at DTU Space.
“A large number of supernovae leads to a cold climate with a large temperature difference between the equator and the polar region. This results in stronger winds, mixing of the oceans, and the transfer of essential nutrients for life to surface waters along the continental shelf.”
The paper concludes that supernovae are essential for primary biological productivity by affecting the transport of nutrients. Total primary biological productivity provides energy to ecosystems, and speculation has suggested that changes in biological productivity may affect biodiversity. The current results are consistent with this hypothesis.
“New evidence suggests a relationship between life on Earth and supernovae, mediated by the influence of cosmic rays on clouds and climate,” says Henrik Svensmark.
Supernovae and climate
When massive stars explode, they produce cosmic rays, which are elementary particles of enormous energies. Cosmic rays travel to our solar system, where some end their journey by colliding with Earth’s atmosphere. Previous studies by Henrik Svensmark and colleagues referenced below show that it has become the primary source of ions that help form and grow the aerosols required in cloud formation.
Because clouds can regulate the solar energy that reaches the Earth’s surface, the cosmic ray cloud and aerosols influence climate. Evidence shows significant climatic shifts when the intensity of cosmic rays changes by several hundred percent over millions of years.
Reference: “The continuing impact of supernovae on biodiversity over the eons of life,” by Henrik Svensmark, March 16, 2023, Available here. Ecology and evolution.
doi: 10.1002/ece3.9898
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