Using the Fossil Record to Understand Extinction Risk and Inform Marine Conservation in a Changing World

Author:

Finnegan Seth1,Harnik Paul G.2,Lockwood Rowan3,Lotze Heike K.4,McClenachan Loren5,Kahanamoku Sara S.16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA;,

2. Department of Earth and Environmental Geosciences, Colgate University, Hamilton, New York, USA;

3. Department of Geology, William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA;

4. Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada;

5. Department of History and School of Environmental Studies, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada;

6. Hawaiʻi Sea Grant College Program, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, USA

Abstract

Understanding the long-term effects of ongoing global environmental change on marine ecosystems requires a cross-disciplinary approach. Deep-time and recent fossil records can contribute by identifying traits and environmental conditions associated with elevated extinction risk during analogous events in the geologic past and by providing baseline data that can be used to assess historical change and set management and restoration targets and benchmarks. Here, we review the ecological and environmental information available in the marine fossil record and discuss how these archives can be used to inform current extinction risk assessments as well as marine conservation strategies and decision-making at global to local scales. As we consider future research directions in deep-time and conservationpaleobiology, we emphasize the need for coproduced research that unites researchers, conservation practitioners, and policymakers with the communities for whom the impacts of climate and global change are most imminent.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Oceanography

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