Abstract

The Ordovician–Silurian transition (OST) is a crucial geological interval in Earth history, coinciding with the first of the ‘Big Five’ Phanerozoic mass extinction events (ca. 445 Ma). In addition to the dramatic loss of biodiversity, significant environmental change course such as redox conditions and nutrient availability have been the focus of debate. Previous studies have used isotopes of nitrogen (N) to reconstruct the redox evolution of the paleo-ocean and have identified biological nitrogen fixation as the main mode of nitrogen cycling during the OST. However, low δ15N values, ranging from −2‰ to +1‰, possibly correspond to four different redox conditions. The precise roles of these redox conditions and the spatial distributions of phytoplankton communities under different nitrogen cycles remain elusive. Here we present high-resolution nitrogen isotope, carbon isotope and lipid biomarker datasets from two drilled sections located on a submerged high of the Yangtze Basin to unravel the coupling between nitrogen biogeochemical cycling and phytoplankton community structure across the OST. The results suggest that there was a dominantly biological nitrogen fixation with local aerobic nitrogen cycling in the Yangtze Sea, and the nitrate inventory during the OST was smaller than that in the modern ocean. Particularly, before the Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME), N-fixing cyanobacteria were likely extensively developed in the photic zone, while eukaryotic algae were limited. After the LOME, sea levels rose and the chemocline was higher than before the LOME. There was probably some NO3− that did not undergo denitrification in the surface ocean, favoring the development of eukaryotic algae. The ecological diversification from prokaryotic cyanobacteria to eukaryotic phytoplankton to eukaryotic zooplankton is likely to be a response to the enhanced biological pump, which generates positive feedbacks among the evolution of eukaryotic phytoplankton, organic matter enrichment, ocean oxygenation and atmospheric oxygen levels.

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