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The past to unravel the future: Deoxygenation events in the geological archive and the anthropocene oxygen crisis

Earth-Science Reviews 2023 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alan Maria Mancini, Caterina Morigi, Francesca Lozar, Rocco Gennari, Caterina Morigi, Rossella Capozzi, Caterina Morigi, Alessandra Negri Alessandra Negri

Summary

Researchers reviewed how past geological episodes of ocean oxygen loss (deoxygenation) can serve as historical models for understanding the oxygen depletion now accelerating due to climate change. While today's crisis is driven by unprecedented human activity, studying ancient oxygen-poor oceans can help scientists predict how marine ecosystems will respond and where the worst impacts may occur.

Despite the observation that we are witnessing a true oxygen crisis, the ocean deoxygenation theme is getting less attention from the media and population compared to other environmental stressors concerning climate change. The current ocean oxygen crisis is characterized by a complex interplay of climatic, biological, and oceanographic processes acting at different time scales. Earth system models offer insights into future deoxygenation events and their potential extent; however, their capacity to precisely constrain these events is complicated by the intricate interplay of various interconnected feedback mechanisms. The Earth's geological history has been punctuated by regional and global deoxygenation events, which are usually expressed by organic-rich sediment in the geological record and can be useful past analogues of the present-day and future oxygenation crisis related to current climatic stress. Accordingly, we provide an overview of the key elements characterizing past deoxygenation events, aiming for a better understanding of the Anthropocene oxygen crisis and its potential evolution. We suggest that past global deoxygenation events during hypethermals may bear similarities to present-day dynamics in the open ocean. Additionally, we explore the significance of regional deoxygenation events with cyclical occurrences for better constraining environmental dynamics and ecological impacts in semi-enclosed, restricted, and marginal basins. Despite the unprecedented magnitude and rate of current anthropogenic pressures, it is essential to consider the comparison of triggers and feedbacks from ancient deoxygenation events when investigating the future of this concealed but ecologically impactful problem.

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