Litcius/Paper detail

A new constraint on the antiquity of ancient haloalkaliphilic green algae that flourished in a ca. 300 Ma Paleozoic lake

Liuwen Xia, Jian Cao, Carina Lee, Eva E. Stüeken, Dongming Zhi, Gordon D. Love

2020Geobiology47 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract It is established that green algae and land plants progressively colonized freshwater and terrestrial habitats throughout the Paleozoic Era, but little is known about the ecology of Paleozoic saline lakes. Here, we report lipid biomarker and petrographic evidence for the occurrence of a green alga as a major primary producer in a late Paleozoic alkaline lake (Fengcheng Formation; 309–292 Ma). A persistently saline and alkaline lacustrine setting is supported by mineralogical and lipid biomarker evidence alongside extremely enriched δ 15 N bulk values (+16 to +24‰) for the lake depocenter. The prominence of C 28 and C 29 steroids, co‐occurring with abundant carotene‐derived accessory pigment markers in these ancient rocks, is suggestive of prolific primary production and elevated source inputs from haloalkaliphilic green algae. The high C 28 /C 29 ‐sterane ratios (0.78–1.29) are significantly higher than the typical marine value reported for late Paleozoic rocks (<0.5) and thus are associated with certain groups of chlorophytes. Adaptation to such extreme lacustrine environments, aided by enhanced biosynthesis of certain cell membrane lipids, likely played an important role in the evolution and physiological development of ancient green algae.

Topics & Concepts

PaleozoicAlgaeSteraneGreen algaeBiologyPetrographyGeologyEcologyPaleontologySource rockHopanoidsStructural basinHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysisGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchPaleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils