A Molecular Biomarker for End-Permian Plant Extinction In

A Molecular Biomarker for End-Permian Plant Extinction In

https://doi.org/10.1130/G49123.1 Manuscript received 6 April 2021 Revised manuscript received 27 June 2021 Manuscript accepted 1 July 2021 © 2021 The Authors. Gold Open Access: This paper is published under the terms of the CC-BY license. A molecular biomarker for end-Permian plant extinction in South China Chunjiang Wang1* and Henk Visscher2* 1 College of Geosciences, and State Key Laboratory of Petroleum Resources and Prospecting, China University of Petroleum (Beijing), Beijing 102249, China 2 Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, 3584CS Utrecht, The Netherlands ABSTRACT remaining islands were the domain of the clas- To help resolve current controversies surrounding the fundamental question of synchrony sic late Permian Gigantopteris wetland flora, the between end-Permian mass extinction on land and in the sea, we examined the marine Perm- final phase in the development of the Pennsyl- ian–Triassic reference section at Meishan (southeastern China) for land-derived molecular vanian–Permian Cathaysian floral province of degradation products of pentacyclic triterpenoids with oleanane carbon skeletons, diagnostic East Asia. Macrofossil and spore-pollen records for the Permian plant genus Gigantopteris. We identified a continuous quantitative record of have been analyzed from multiple boundary sec- mono-aromatic des-A-oleanane, which abruptly ends in the main marine extinction interval tions deposited in fluvial and coastal settings, just below the Permian-Triassic boundary. This taxon-specific molecular biomarker, therefore, particularly in the provinces of Guizhou and reveals in unmatched detail the timing and tempo of the demise of one of the most distinc- Yunnan in southwestern China (e.g., Ouyang, tive Permian plants and provides evidence of synchronous extinction among continental and 1982; Peng et al., 2006; Yu et al., 2015; Chu marine organisms. Parallel reduction in the relative abundance of lignin phenols confirms et al., 2016; Feng et al., 2020a, 2020b). By using that aridity-driven extinction was not restricted to Gigantopteris but likely affected the entire magnetostratigraphy, isotope stratigraphy, and wetland flora of the equatorial South China microcontinent. U-Pb geochronology of interbedded volcanic ash layers, plant records have been correlated to INTRODUCTION Permian-Triassic boundary, Meishan section D the Meishan section (e.g., Zhang et al., 2016). Multiple lines of paleontological, geochemi- serves as the principal global reference profile Although there is little doubt about a marked cal, and sedimentological evidence confirm for biological, chemical, and physical signa- floral turnover, these correlations offer conflict- worldwide collapse of continental and marine tures of the end-Permian biotic crisis. Starting ing views as to whether the timing of eventual ecosystems at the end of the Permian Period. at the base of bed 25, a profound loss of faunal extinction of the genus Gigantopteris and other However, there are conflicting views on the biodiversity defines the main marine extinc- characteristic taxa of the Gigantopteris flora pre- question of synchrony of the associated mass tion interval, bracketed by high-precision U-Pb ceded, paralleled, or succeeded the end-Permian extinctions. Global meta-analysis of the tem- zircon dates between 251.941 ± 0.037 Ma and marine extinctions. In this study, we demonstrate poral distribution of Permian and Triassic plant 251.880 ± 0.031 Ma (Burgess et al., 2014; Chen that the molecular remnants of land plants pre- fossils may suggest that evidence for mass ex- et al., 2015). Molecular studies have demon- served in the GSSP section shed new light on tinction among land plants is far from robust strated significant influx of plant and bacterial temporal links between continental and marine (Nowak et al., 2019), and regional studies com- organic matter, reflecting ecosystem collapse bioevents, providing an effective solution to this monly conclude that continental and marine ex- on land (e.g., Wang, 2007; Wang and Visscher, uncertainty. tinctions were timed differently (e.g., Fielding 2007; Nabbefeld et al., 2010; Kaiho et al., 2016). et al., 2019). The resolution of the temporal re- However, the Meishan section does not contain a CHEMOTAXONOMIC BACKGROUND lationship between extinctions on land and in the record of physical plant fossils suitable for direct Gigantopteris has been established as a fossil sea is necessary to fully understand the cause of temporal correlation of continental and marine genus for megaphyllous leaves with a remark- the end-Permian biotic crisis. patterns of taxic extinction. Plant macrofossils able angiosperm-like physiognomy and vena- Disagreements about extinction synchrony are absent, and latest Permian palynomorph tion pattern (e.g., Glasspool et al., 2004). Along are at least partly related to imprecise correla- assemblages are dominated by marine phyto- with morphologically similar Permian genera tion of continental fossil records to the marine plankton (acritarchs), with only a subordinate from East Asia and North America, differing Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) and inconclusive record of spores and pollen of in details of gross leaf architecture and vena- for the base of the Triassic at Meishan, Zheji- land plants (Ouyang and Utting, 1990). tion, Gigantopteris may be grouped in the poly- ang Province in southeastern China (Yin et al., The Meishan section is paleogeographically phyletic order Gigantopteridales. Jointly with 2001). Besides hosting the conodont-defined situated on the South China tectonic block, a the genus Gigantonoclea, however, Gigantop- microcontinent in the easternmost Paleo-Te- teris may cover a narrow monophyletic taxon. thys Ocean, largely covered by sea during the Liana-like stems associated with these genera *E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] Permian-Triassic transition. Floristically, the share the earliest known secondary xylem with CITATION: Wang, C., and Visscher, H., 2021, A molecular biomarker for end-Permian plant extinction in South China: Geology, v. 49, p. XXX–XXX, https:// doi.org/10.1130/G49123.1 Geological Society of America | GEOLOGY | Volume XX | Number XX | www.gsapubs.org 1 Downloaded from http://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article-pdf/doi/10.1130/G49123.1/5393365/g49123.pdf by guest on 30 September 2021 high-conductivity vessel conduits (Li et al., and defense against herbivores, pests, and patho- from southeastern Asia and North America still 1996), but conclusive information regarding gens (e.g., Wink, 2016). Except for a record of needs to be determined. the structure of reproductive organs, essential oleanolic acid in Pinus massoniana, oleanane is Modern soil organic matter commonly con- in resolving the phylogenetic position of fossil unknown from extant gymnosperms (Si et al., tains angiosperm-derived oleananes or their gymnosperms, is still lacking. The morphology 2017); among extinct gymnosperms, it is also diagenetic derivatives (e.g., Jaffé et al., 1996; of gigantopterid pollen grains is elusive, pre- found in some Mesozoic Bennettitales (Taylor Otto and Simpson, 2005; He et al., 2018). Like- cluding the detection of Gigantopteris in spore- et al., 2006). The source of Carboniferous ole- wise, soils of the Permian Gigantopteris forests pollen records. anane in North America is still unknown (Philp could have contained aliphatic or aromatized In addition to morphological and anatomical et al., 2021). Although secondary metabolites degradation products of oleanane precursors. similarities, the most startling resemblance of do not necessarily carry phylogenetic informa- Because continentally sourced organic carbon in Gigantopteris and Gigantonoclea with angio- tion (Wink, 2016), among the Permian plants marine sediments is typically predominated by sperms is the presence of oleanane-type molecu- in South China the compound may serve as a soil-derived constituents (Regnier et al., 2013), lar compounds (Taylor et al., 2006). Oleanane useful chemotaxonomic character to diagnose we hypothesize that the Meishan organic assem- represents the most common carbon skeleton for the Gigantopteris-Gigantonoclea combination. blage may well include a record of gigantopterid the synthesis of pentacyclic-triterpenoid second- For taxonomic convenience, we here refer to this molecular biomarkers, suggesting the precise ary metabolites presently produced by a wide grouping as Gigantopteris. The presence or ab- timing of end-Permian plant extinction on the variety of angiosperms as chemical protection sence of oleanane in other gigantopterid genera South China microcontinent. We selected 88 A B C Figure 1. Identification and genesis of mono-aromatic des-A-oleananes (MADAO). (A) Mass chromatograms (m/z 85 + m/z 145 + m/z 159; m/z—ratio of mass to charge) of five successive samples (from bottom to top), exemplifying the dramatic decline of relative abundances of compounds 1a, 1b, and 2 across the Permian-Triassic boundary interval (beds 24 − 29; see Figs. 2 and 3) at Meishan, southeastern China. (B) Mass spectra and proposed structure elucidation for compounds 1a and 2. Base peak (b.p.) ions at m/z 145 and m/z 159 can be rational- ized as result of C- and D-ring cleavage. Compounds 1a-1b and 2 can be tentatively classified as C23 des-A-26-norolean-5,7,9-triene and C24 des-A-26-norolean-5,7,9-triene, respectively. (C) Proposed diagenetic pathways for derivation of compounds 1a-1b and 2 from β-amyrin via 2,3-cleavage (pathway 1) or 3,4-cleavage (pathway 2), followed

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