The marine biodiversity impact of the Late Miocene Mediterranean salinity crisis.
Konstantina AgiadiNiklas HohmannElsa GliozziDanae ThivaiouFrancesca R BoselliniMarco TavianiGiovanni BianucciAlberto CollaretaLaurent LondeixCostanza FarandaFrancesca BulianEfterpi KoskeridouFrancesca LozarAlan Maria ManciniStefano DominiciPierre MoissetteIldefonso Bajo CamposEnrico BorghiGeorge IliopoulosAssimina AntonarakouGeorge KontakiotisEvangelia BesiouStergios D ZarkogiannisMathias HarzhauserFrancisco Javier SierroMarta CollIuliana VasilievAngelo CamerlenghiDaniel Garcia-CastellanosPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
Massive salt accumulations, or salt giants, have formed in highly restricted marine basins throughout geological history, but their impact on biodiversity has been only patchily studied. The salt giant in the Mediterranean Sea formed as a result of the restriction of its gateway to the Atlantic during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) 5.97 to 5.33 million years ago. Here, we quantify the biodiversity changes associated with the MSC based on a compilation of the Mediterranean fossil record. We conclude that 86 endemic species of the 2006 pre-MSC marine species survived the crisis, and that the present eastward-decreasing richness gradient in the Mediterranean was established after the MSC.
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