Biology 505: ExtinctionFall 2010

Instructor. Kenneth Gobalet

Office 205 Science 1

Phone 661 654-3038

Email:

Required Book: Alvarez, W. 1997. T. rex and the Crater of Doom.

Reading List

Overview of Extinction

Baumbach, R.K. 2006. Phanerozoic biodiversity, mass extinctions. Annual Review

of Earth and Planetary Science 34:127-155.

Benton M.J. 1995. Diversification and extinction in the history of life. Science 268:52-

58.

Erwin D. 2006. A cacophony of causes. Pgs 17-76 in Extinction: How Life on Earth Nearly Ended 250 million years ago.

Hoffman, P.F. et al. 1998. A Neoproterozoic snowball earth. Science 281: 1342-1346.

(Kerr, R.A. 2010. Snowball earth has melted back to a profound wintry mix. Science

237: 1186)

Jablonski, D. 1986. Background and mass extinctions: the alternation of

macroevolutionary regimes. Science 231: 129-133.

Martin, R.A., 2004. Origin and Evolution of Species. Pgs 29- inMissing Links, Evolutionary Concepts and Transitions through Time.

Raup, D.M. and J. J. Sepkoski. 1982. Mass extinctions in the marine fossil record. Science 215: 1501 -1502.

Raup, D.M. and J. J. Sepkoski. 1984. Periodicity of extinctions in the geologic past.

PNAS 81: 801-805.

Sepkoski, J.J. 1990. The taxonomic structure of periodic extinction. Geological Society of America Special paper 247. Pgs 33-44.

Stanley, S. M. 1990. Delayed recovery and the spacing of major extinctions.

Paleobiology 16(4): 401-414.

Twitchett, R.J. 2006. The palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology and papaeoenvironmental analysis of mass extinction events. PALAEO 232: 190-213.

Ecology/Extinction:

Berger, J., et al. 2001. Recolonizing carnivores and naïve prey: conservation lessons

from Pleistocene extinctions. Science 291: 1036-1039.

Brashares, J.S. 2010. Filtering Wildlife Science 329: 402-403.

Croll, D.A. et al 2005. Introduced predators transform subarctic islands from grassland to

tundra. Science 307:1959-1961.

Crooks, K.R. and M.E. Soule 1999. Mesopredator release and avifaunal extinctions in a

fragmented system. Nature 400: 563-566.

Donlon J. et al. 2006. Pleistocene rewilding: an optimistic agenda fro twenty-first century

conservation. American Naturalist 168(5): 660-681.

(Donlon, J. (commentary) 2005. Rewilding North America. Nature 436: 913-916)

Estes, J.A and J.F Palmisrano, 1974. Sea otters: their role in structuring nearshore

communities. Science 185: 1058-1060.

Estes, J.A. et al. 1998. Killer whale predation on sea otters linking oceanic and nearshore ecosystems Science 282: 473-476.

Hairston, N.G. et al. 1960. Community structure, population control, and competition.

The American Naturalist XCIV (879): 421-425.

Heath, D.D. et al. 2003. Rapid evolution of egg size in captive salmon. Science

299: 1738-1740.

(Zimmer, C. 2003. Rapid evolution can foil even the best-laid plans. Science 300:875)

Jansen, D.H. and P.AS. Martin. 1982. Neotropical anachronisms: the fruits the

gomphotheres ate. Science 215: 19-27.

Johnson, N. et al. 2006. Rapid advance of spring arrival dates in long-distance migratory

Birds. Science 312: 1959-1961.

Morell, V. 2007. Aspens return to Yellowstone, with help from some wolves. Science

317: 438-439.

(Morell, V. 2008. Wolves at the door of a more dangerous world. Science 319: 890-892)

Palmer, T.M. 2008. Breakdown of an ant-plant mutualism follows the loss of large

herbivores from an African savanna. Science 319: 192-195.

(Leslie, M. 2008. The importance of being eaten. Science 319: 146-147)

Ripple, W.J. and R.L. Beschta 2005. Linking wolves and plants: Aldo Leopold on trophic

Cascades. Bioscience 55(7): 613-621.

Sharam, G.J. et al. 2009. Serengeti birds maintain forests by inhibiting seed predators.

Science 325: 51.

Terborgh, J. et al. 2001. Ecological meltdown in predator-free forest fragments. Science

294: 1923-1925.

K-T Extinction:

Alvarez, L.W. et al. 1980. Extraterrestrial cause for the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction. Science 208: 1095-1107.

Alvarez, W. 1997. T.rex and the Crater of Doom.

Briggs, J.C. 1991. A Cretaceous-Tertiary mass extinction? BioScience 41(9): 619-624.

Fastovsky, D.E. and P.M. Sheehan. 2005. The extinction of the dinosaurs in North America. GSA Today 15(3): 4-10.

Feduccia, A. 1995. Explosive evolution of Tertiary birds and mammals. Science 267:637- 638.

Flannery, T. 2001. The Eternal Frontier: Ground Zero pgs 9-37.

Hallam, A. 1987. End Cretaceous mass extinction event: argument for terrestrial causation. Science 238: 1237-1242.

Rampino, M.R. et al. 1988. Volcanic winters. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary

Science 16: 73-99.

Sagan, C. Nuclear Winter.

Schulte, et al. 2010. The Chicxulub asteroid impact and mass extinction at the

Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary. Science 327: 1214-1218.

(Schulte (letters). 2010. Cretaceous extinctions: multiple causes. Science 238: 973-976)

Sheehan, P.M. 1991. Sudden extinction of the dinosaurs: latest Cretaceous, upper Great Plains, U.S.A. Science 254: 835-839.

End Permian Extinction:

Benton, M.J. and R.J. Twitchett 2003. How to kill (almost) all life: the end-Permian

extinction event. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 18(7): 358-365.

Benton, M. J. 2008. When Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of

all Time. Chapter 4: The concept that dared not speak its name.

Chapter 6: Diversity extinction and mass extinction.

Braynard, A. et al. 2009. Good genes and good luck: Ammonoid diversity and the end

Permian Mass Extinction. Science 325: 1118-1121.

(Marshall, C. R. and D. K. Jacobs. 2009. Flourishing after the end Permian mass

extinction. Science 325: 1079-1080)

Foote, M. 1999. Morphological diversity in the evolutionary radiation of Paleozoic and post-Paleozoic crinoids. Paleobiology 23(2): 1-115. (supplement)

Huey, R.B. et al. 2005. Hypoxia, global warming, and terrestrial late Permian

extinctions. Science 308: 398-401.

Knoll, A.H. et al. 1996. Comparative earth history and late Permian mass extinction.

Science 273: 452-457.

Raup, D.M. 1979. Size of the Permo-Triassic bottleneck and its evolutionary

implications. Science 206: 217-218.

Pleistocene-Early Holocene Extinction:

Barnosky,A.D. et al. 2006. Assessing the causes of late Pleistocene extinction on the continents. Science 306: 70-74.

Flannery, T, 2001. The Eternal Frontier: Laurentide pgs 146-169.

Hansen, D.M. and M. Galetti 2009. The forgotten megafuana. Science 324: 42-43.

Marshall, L.G. et al. 1982. Mammalian evolution and the great American interchange

Science 215: 1351-1357.

Martin, P.S. 2005. Twilight of the mammoths, ice age extinctions and the rewilding of

America: Discovering the Lost World pgs. 4-57.

Reed, C.A. 1970. Extinction of mammalian megafauna in the old world late Quaternary. Bioscience 20: 284-288.

Australia

Dayton, L. 2001. Mass extinction pinned on ice age hunters. Science 292:1819

Johnson, C.N. 2005. The remaking of Australia’s ecology. Science 309: 255-256.

Miller, G.H. et al. 1999. Pleistocene extinction of Genyornis newtoni: human impact

Australian megafauna. Science 283: 205-208.

Miller, G.H. et al. 2005. Ecosystem collapse in Pleistocene Australia and a human role. Science 309: 287-290.

Roberts R.G. et al. 2001. New ages for the last Australian megafauna: continent-wide

extinction about 46,000years ago. Science 292: 1888-1892.

Roberts, R.G. and B.W. Brook. 2010. And then there were none? Science 327: 420-422.

North America

Alroy J. et al. 2001. A multispecies overkill simulaion of the end-Pleistocene

magafaunal mass extinction. Science 292:1893-1896. (supplement)

Buffington, J.D. 1971. Competition and Pleistocene megafauna extinction. BioScience 21:167-170. (supplement)

Gill J. L. et al. 2009. Pleistocene megafaunal collapse, novel plant communities, and

enhanced fire regimes in North America. Science 326: 1100-1103.

(Johnson, C. 2009. Megafaunal decline and fall (reviews Gill et al 2009). Science 326: 1072-1073)

Grayson D.K. and D.J. Meltzer. 2002. Clovis hunting and large mammal extinction: a

critical review of the evidence. Journal of World Prehistory 16(4): 313-339.

Grayson D.K. and D.J. Meltzer. 2003. A requiem for North American overkill. Journal of

Archaeological Science 30(2003): 585-593.

Kennett, D.J et al. 2009. Nanodiamonds in the Younger Dryas boundary sediment layer.

Science 323: 94.

Waters, M.R. et al. 2007. Redefining the age of Clovis: implications for the peopling of the Americas. Science 315: 1122-1126. (supplement)

Current Extinction

Baksin, Y. 1992. Africa’s troubled waters. BioScience 42(7): 476-481.

Barlow, G.W. 2000. The Cichlid Fishes: Fish at Risk.

Diamond, J. 1992. The Third Chimpanzee: The Second Cloud.

Kaufman, L. 1992. Catastrophic change in species-rich freshwater ecosystems.

Bioscience 42(11): 846-858.

Kiesecker, J.M. et al 2001. Complex causes of amphibian population declines. Nature 410: 681-684.

Leakey, R. 1995. Sixth Extinction: Bad Genes or Bad luck? Pgs. 59-71.

Leakey, R. 1995. Sixth Extinction. pgs 232-245.

Mann, C.C. 2006. 1491 New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus. Pgs.350- 362.

Pimm, S. et al. 2006. Human impacts on the rates of recent, present, and future bird

extinctions. PNAS 103 (29): 10941-10946.

Thomas J.A. et al. 2004. Comparative losses of British butterflies, birds and plants and

the global extinctions crisis Science 303: 1879-1881.

(Pennisi, E. 2004. Naturalists’ surveys show that British butterflies are going, going…

Science 303: 1747)

Fisheries

Baum, J.K. and R.A. Myers. 2004. Shifting baselines and the decline of pelagic shark in the Gulf of Mexico. Ecology Letters 7:135-145.

Carpenter, K.E. et al. 2008. One-third of reef-building corals face elevated extinction risk

from climate change and local impacts. Science 321:560-563.

Coleman F. C. et al, 2004. The impact of United States recreational fisheries on marine

fish populations. Science 305: 1958-1960.

Diaz, R.J. et al. 2008. Spreading dead zones and consequences for marine ecosystems.

Science 321: 926-929.

Dybas, C.L. 2005. Dead zones spreading in world oceans. Bioscience 55(7): 552-557.

Ellis, R. 2008. Tuna, a Love Story: Can we save the bluefin? Pgs 237-281.

Grimm, D. 2002. Sportfishers on the hook for dwindling U.S, fish stocks. Science

305: 1235.

Hughes, T.P. et al 2003. Climate change, human impacts, and the resilience of coral

reefs. Science 301: 929-933.

Hutchings, J.A. and J.D. Reynolds. 2004 Marine fish population collapses: consequences

for recovery and extinctions risk. Bioscience 54: 297-309.

Jackson, B.C. et al. 2001. Historical overfishing and the recent collapse of coastal

ecosystems. Science 293: 629-638.

Kiessling, W. et al. 2010. Reefs as cradles of evolution and sources of biodiversity in the

Phanerozoic Science 327: 196-198

Kolbert, E. 2010. The Scales Fall (Books). New Yorker August 2, 2010 pgs 70-73.

Myers, R.A. et al. 2007. Cascading effects of the loss of apex predatory sharks from a

coastal ocean. Science 315: 1846-1850.

Myers R. A. and B. Worm. 2003. Rapid worldwide depletion of predatory fish

communities. Nature 423:280-283.

Myers and Worm 2003 Sea Web perspective on Nature article.

Pauly, D. 1995. Anecdotes and the shifting baseline syndrome of fisheries. TREE 10:430.

Pauly, D. et al. 2002. Fishing down aquatic food webs. American Scientist 88: 46-51.

Ward, P. and R. A. Myers. 2005. Shifts in open-ocean fish communities coinciding with

the commencement of commercial fishing. Ecology 86(4): 835-847.

Worm, B. et al. 2005. Global patterns of predator diversity in the open oceans. Science

1365: 1365-1368.

Worm, B. et al. 2006. Impacts of biodiversity loss on ocean ecosystem services. Science

314: 787-790.

Worm, B. et al. 2009. Rebuilding global fisheries. Science 325:578-585.

Zeebe, R.E. et al. 2008. Carbon emissions and acidification. Science 321: 51-52.

Pacific Islands

Diamond, J. 2000. Enhanced: blitzkrieg against the moas. Science 287: 2170-2171.

Holdaway et al. 2000. Rapid extinctions of the Moas (Aves: Dinornithiformes): model,

test, and implications. Science 287: 2250-2254.

Olson, S.L. and H.F. James. 1982. Fossil birds from the Hawaiian Islands: evidence for

wholesale extinction by man before western contact. Science 217: 633-635.

Steadman, D.W. 1995. Extinction of birds on tropical Pacific islands. Pgs 33-49 in: Late

Quaternary Environments and Deep History: a Tribute to Paul S. Marin. D.S.

Steadman and J. I Mead Eds. The Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, South Dakota, Inc, Scientific papers, Volume 3 Hot Springs South Dakota, 1995,

Steadman, D.W. 1995. Prehistoric extinctions of Pacific Island birds: biodiversity meets

zooarchaeology Science 267: 1123-1131.

Steadman, D.W. 1999. The prehistory of vertebrates, especially birds, on Tinian,

Aguiguan, and Rota, Northern Mariana Islands. Micronesica 31(2): 319-345.

Steadman, D.W. 2002. Everything you want to know and Moa: review of The Lost World

of the Moa, Prehistoric Life on New Zealand by Trevor H. Worthy and R. N.

Holdaway.

Steadman, D. W. et al. 2002. Rapid prehistoric extinctions of iguanas and birds in

Polynesia. PNAS 99:3673-3677.

Steadman, D.W. and P.S. Martin. 2003. The late quaternary extinction and future

resurrection of birds on Pacific islands. Earth-Science Reviews 61: 133-147.

Climate Change:

Breckage, B. et al. 2008. A rapid upward shift of a forest ecotone during 40 years of

warming in the Green Mountains of Vermont. PNAS 105(11): 4197-4202.

Bush, M.B. et al. 2004. 48,000 years of climate and forest change in a biodiversity hot

spot. Science 303: 827-829.

Clarke, G, et al. 2003. Superlakes, megafloods, and abrupt climate change. Science 301: 922-923.

Colwell, R.K. et al 2008. Global warming elevational range shifts, and lowland biotic attrition in the wet tropics. Science 322: 258-261.

Demenocal, P.B. and E. R. cook 2005. Perspectives on Diamond’s Collapse How

Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. Current Anthropology 46: S91-S99.

Diamond J. 1987. The worst mistake in the history of the human race .Discover. May 64- 66.

Feely, R.A. et al. 2004. Impact of anthropogenic CO2 on the CaCO3 system in the

oceans. Science 305: 362-366.

Flannery, T. 2005. The Weather Makers: The Unravelling World pgs 87-94.

Gilg, O. and N. G. Yoccoz. 2010. Explaining bird migration. Science 327; 276-277.

Gleich, P.H. et al. 2010. Climate change and the integrity of science. Science 328: 689-

690.

Grebmeier, J.M. et al. 2006. A major ecosystem shift in the northern Bering Sea.

Science 311: 1461-1464.

Guha, Ramachandra. 2006. How Much Should a Person Consume? Cptr 9

Moritz, C. et al. 2008. Impact of a century of climate change on small mammmal

communities in Yosemite National Park, USA Science 322: 261-264.

Parmesan, C. et al. 1999. Poleward shifts in geographic ranges of butterfly species

associated with regional warming. Nature 399: 579-583.

Parmesan, C. and G. Yohe. 2003. A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change

impacts across natural systems. Nature 421: 37-42.

Stine, S. 1994. Extreme and persistent drought in California and Patagonia during mediaeval time. Nature 369: 546-549.

Svensen, H. et al. 2004. Release of methane from a volcanic basin as a mechanism for

initial Eocene global warming. Nature 429: 542-545.

Walther, G. et al. 2002. Ecological responses to recent climate change Nature 416: 389-

395.

Yu, S. et al. 2010. Freshwater outburst from Lake Superior as a trigger for the cold event

9300 years ago. Science 328: 1262-1266.

Recommended Books:

Alt, David. 2001. Glacial Lake Missoula and its Humongous Floods.

Barlow, George W. 2000. The Cichlid Fishes.

Bavington, Dean and Graeme Wynn 2010. Managed Annihilation: an Unnatural

History of the Cod Collapse.

Benton, Michael J. 2008. When Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of

all Time.

Brown, Lester R. 2008. Plan B 3.0.

Chouinard, Yvon. 2006. Let my People go Surfing, the education of a reluctant

Businessman.

Clover, Charles. 2006. The End of the Line. How Overfishing is Changing the World and

What we Eat.

Diamond, Jared. 2005. Collapse, How Societies Chose to Fail or Succeed.

Ellis, Richard. 2008. Tuna, a Love Story.

Erwin, Douglas H. 1993. The Great Paleozoic Crisis.

Erwin, D. 2006, Extinction: How Life on Earth nearly ended 250 million years ago

Fagan, Brian. 2000. The Little Ice Age.

Fagan, B. 2008.The Great Warming: Climate Change & the Rise & Fall of Civilizations.

Flannery, Tim. 1994 The Future Eaters

Flannery, Tim. 2006. The Weathermakers.

Franklin, H. Bruce. 2007. The Most Important Fish in the Sea.

Greenberg, Paul. 2010. Four Fish: the Future of the Last Wild Food.

Guha, Ramachandra. 2006. How Much Should a Person Consume?

Harris, Michael. 1998. Lament for an Ocean.

Helvarg, David. 2010. Saved by the Sea: a Love Story with Fish.

Knecht, G. Bruce. 2006. Hooked, Pirates Poaching and the Perfect Fish.

Leakey, R. and R. Lewin 1995. The Sixth Extinction.

Mann, Charles C. 2006. 1491, New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus

Martin, Paul. S. 2005. Twilight of the Mammoths

McGhee, George R. 1996. The late Devonian Mass Extinction.

Montgomery, David R. 2003. King of Fish, the Thousand-Year Run of Salmon.

Montgomery, David R. 2007. Dirt, the Erosion of Civilizations.

Moorehead, Allan 1987. The Fatal Impact.

Palumbi, Stephen R. 2001. The Population Explosion, How Humans Cause Rapid

Evolutionary Change.

Pauly, Daniel. 2010. Five Easy Pieces: The Impact of Fisheries on Marine Ecosystems.

Roberts, Callum. 2007. The Unnatural History of the Sea.

Roberts, Paul. 2004. The End of Oil.

Steadman, David W. 2006. Extinction and Biogeography of Tropical Pacific Birds.

Stolzenburg, William. 2008. Where the Wild Things Were.

Weber, Michael. L. 2002. From Abundance to Scarcity

Wells, Spencer. 2010. Pandora’s Seed; the Unforeseen Cost of Civilization.