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Abstract
The most severe mass extinction among animals took place in the latest Permian (ca. 252 million years ago). Due to scarce and impoverished fossil floras from the earliest Triassic, the common perception has been that land plants likewise suffered a mass extinction, but doubts remained. Here we use global occurrence data of both plant macro- and microfossils to analyse plant biodiversity development across the Permian–Triassic boundary. We show that the plant fossil record is strongly biased and that evidence for a mass extinction among plants in the latest Permian is not robust. The taxonomic diversities of gymnosperm macrofossils and of the pollen produced by this group are particularly incongruent. Our results indicate that gymnosperm macrofossils are considerably undersampled for the Early Triassic, which creates the impression of increased gymnosperm extinction in the latest Permian.
It has been thought that land plants suffered a mass extinction along with animals at the end of the Permian. Here, Nowak et al. show that the apparent plant mass extinction is a result of biases in the fossil record and their reanalysis suggests a lower magnitude and more selective plant extinction.
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1 Museum of Nature South Tyrol, Bolzano, Italy
2 Paläontologisches Institut und Museum, Zürich, Switzerland (GRID:grid.7400.3) (ISNI:0000 0004 1937 0650)
3 Museum of Nature South Tyrol, Bolzano, Italy (GRID:grid.7400.3); Ludwig–Maximilians–Universität, and Bayerische Staatssammlung für Paläontologie und Geologie, Department für Geo– und Umweltwissenschaften, Paläontologie und Geobiologie, Munich, Germany (GRID:grid.5252.0) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 973X)