Title: Todd A. Radenbaugh, PhD
1Paleontology in DeclineMaking Fossils Live Again
- Todd A. Radenbaugh, PhD
- Research Fellow
- Canadian Plains Research Center
Geological Society of America 16-19th,October,
2005 Salt Lake City, UT
2Evolution Under Siege
3NEW Monkey Trials
Pennsylvania school board's decision to teach
both intelligent design and evolution Apr 2004
New Mexico Schools Could Enter Battle Over
'Intelligent Design' (The Washington Post) By
Martha Raffaele, Page A07, October 09, 2005
http//www.theonion.com
4New Vision of the Future?
- Geologist wanted
- Posted January, 2005 from
- COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES- Dr. R Hawkins,
Dean. - Geology Ph.D. required. Teaching Introductory
Geology, Paleontology, and History of Life. - Contact
- Liberty University
- 1971 University Boulevard, Lynchburg, Virginia
24502 - 434-582-2000
http//www.liberty.edu/Administration/HumanResourc
es/index.cfm?PID4353
5Making Paleontology Relevant
Paleontology courses need to be made more
relevant in geology and environmental science
departments curricula.
- The economy is dependent on fossil fuels.
- Anthropogenic forced climate change, habitat
loss, and alteration of natural selection
pressures has caused extinctions and extensive
changes.
No longer concentrate on only morphology and
taxonomy.
6Paleontology in Virginia
Virginia Universities Bachelor Programs
Public (n15) Geology Programs 5 (33) Geology
Classes 12 (80) Paleo Classes 7 (47)
College of William and Mary (2) George Mason
University James Madison University Old Dominion
University (2) Radford University (2) University
of Mary Washington Virginia Tech (2)
Private (n22) Geology Programs 1 (5) Geology
Classes 12 (55) Paleo Classes 2
(9) Virginia Wesleyan College Washington and Lee
7Most Geology classes are Taught in Environmental
Studies Departments
37 Virginia Universities Bachelor Programs
Department Type
Geology Paleo classes 6 6
Environmental and Earth Sci. Paleo classes 16 3 (19)
Other (Physical sciences, Science survey, etc.) Paleo classes 3 0
None Paleo classes 12 0
8Retooling Paleontology
Make room for Paleo and macroevolution classes in
the environmental science curricula
- Link recent environmental change to its geologic
history - Use evidence from paleoecology and glean lessons
for society and economy.
9Two examples
Two examples of how to use paleontological theory
relevant to todays environmental science
programs
- Ediacaran Fauna Reconstruction
- To show different ecological rules of assembly
- 2. Comparisons between Modern and Paleozoic
Ecospace Use - Extinctions - past and present
10Ediacaran Fauna Example
- 650 to 540 Million years ago
- frond-like forms, jellyfish-like imprints, and
trace fossils. - Perhaps evolved as nutrient supplies increased in
shallow waters - causing a radiation of trophic links in food webs
Photo Credit http//www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/vendian
/critters.html
11Garden of Ediacara
- A time when todays rules of ecological assembly
did not apply. - No major predators
- Few mobile fauna
- Dominated by suspension feeding
12Ediacaran Fauna Clay reconstructions
13Ediacaran Fauna
Complete reconstructions of students
14Ecospace Example
Ecospace ecological resources used by species
based on adaptive morphologies (bauplan), space
utilization, and food sources
From Bambach (1983)
Megaguild Summation of the guilds occupied by a
species or group of species.
15Shallow Marine Megaguilds Through Time
16Tiering and Bulldozing
Trace Fossil
From Ausich and Bottjer 1982
17Paleozoic Bulldozing Changes in Ecological
Rules of Assembly
Bulldozers
Victims
18Ecospace Comparisons of a Modern and Late
Paleozoic Assemblage
Megaguild Key
EpS Epibenthic suspension SEnS Shallow
endobenthic suspension DEnS Deep endobenthic
suspension SENSD shallow endobenthic surface
deposit DEnSD Deep endobenthic surface
deposit P/H Predator or Herbivore
19Ecosystem Stability
- Stable ecosystems
- Persistence of similar niches and guilds within
species assemblages, and the same lineages occupy
these niches and guilds for extended periods of
geological time (3-7 m.y.). - Little selection pressure and speciation.
20Are We Changing the Landscape?
- What broad scale changes to biotic structure have
occurred as a result of human activities similar
to those in the fossil record? - Can human activities act as a selection force
with the capacity to change the functional roles
and assembly rules at the ecosystem level?
21Estimation of Vegetation Changes Mixed Grassland
Ecoregion of Saskatchewan
Sources Pre-1880 - Archibold and Wilson (1980)
1990s - Statistics Canada, 1986, 1991 and 1996
Agricultural Census and the South Digital Land
Cover
22Ecospace for Birds
23Bird Assemblages Comparisons
24Guild and Habitat Trends
Significance plt0.01 plt0.05 by Mann-Whitney
test
25Extinctions
- Extinction rate 100 to 1,000 times more rapid
than before human domination one species every
hour to minute - two-thirds of all species of plants, animals
and organisms could be lost in the second half of
the next century. Peter Raven, 2003
26Extinction Recovery
How long does it take to recover from a mass
extinction event?
The origination rate peaks about 20 million years
after the peak in extinction rates
From Sepkoski's 1998
27Conclusions
- Using paleoecology analogs, we can show that
current trends are changing the landscape in
terms of - resource use
- regional species composition
- Evolutions influences on the biosphere,
atmosphere, oceans, and solid earth making it a
key topic in environmental science departments. - Paleontology tell us how ecosystem structure has
changed, and how it might change. - Regional natural selection forces are
diversifying and evolutionary changes as seen in
the fossil record may be occurring.
28Future?
If current declining trends towards paleontology
continue, there will be negative long-term
consequences to science and society in
understanding our future.