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Feb 18, 2015 07:51 PM EST

There have been at least five mass extinction events that profoundly changed the history of life on Earth, and plants have been very resilient to those events, according to a recent study.

A new study led by researchers at the University of Gothenburg shows that for over 400 million years, plants have played an essential role in almost all terrestrial environments and covered most of the world's surface. During this long history, many smaller and a few major periods of extinction severely affected Earth's ecosystems and its biodiversity.

Their findings show that mass extinction events had very different impacts among plant groups. Negative rates of diversification in plants (meaning that more species died out than new species were formed) were never sustained through long time periods. This indicates that, in general, plants have been particularly good at surviving and recovering through tough periods.

"In the plant kingdom, mass extinction events can be seen as opportunities for turnover leading to renewed biodiversity," Daniele Silvestro, lead author of the study, said in a statement.

For the study, researchers collected and analyzed more than 20,000 plant fossils with the aim to understand the effects of such dramatic events on plant diversity.

Most striking were the results for the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction, caused by the impact of an asteroid off the Mexican coast some 66 million years ago. This event had a great impact on the configuration of terrestrial habitats and led to the extinction of all dinosaurs except birds, but surprisingly it had only limited effects on plant diversity.

Some important plant groups, such as the gymnosperms (including pines, spruce and firs) lost a great deal of their diversity through extinction. On the other hand, flowering plants (angiosperms) did not suffer from increased extinction, and shortly after the impact they underwent a new rapid increase in their diversity. These evolutionary dynamics contributed to make flowering plants dominate today's global diversity above all other plant groups.

"Mass extinctions are often thought as a bad thing, but they have been crucial in changing the world into how we know it today," said senior author Alexandre Antonelli.

If that asteroid had not struck the Earth, chances are that large dinosaurs would still be hunting around, mammals would be small and hiding in caves, and humans might never have evolved.

"By studying such extreme events we are trying to learn which groups of organisms and features are more sensitive to changes, so that we can apply this knowledge to protect biodiversity in the face of on-going climate change and human deterioration of natural ecosystems," concluded Antonelli.

The findings are detailed in the upcoming issue of the journal New Phytologist.

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