Chapter 11: Viruses Contribute to Mass Extinctions
Cometary events cause mass extinctions during which some species are eradicated while other species are spared and suddenly evolve.
As described in the previous chapter
[1], viruses have species-specific destructive action, but there’s a difference between a virus causing diseases in a given species and a virus
decisively contributing to the extinction of this same species.
So in the present chapter, we will attempt to answer the following question:
Are there documented cases of pathogens in general and viruses in particular being notably involved in the extinction of a given species?
1/ Past virus-induced extinction
Let’s start with the previously described
[2] K/T extinction ca. 66 Mya, the most recent and the most documented of the big five mass extinctions.
Infectious diseases are considered as one of the major cause of the elimination of some taxa during the
K/T extinction while other taxa were being spared. These species-specific pathogens are fungi
[3] [4], bacterias
[5] and of course
viruses[6].
The
K/T extinction seems to have involved
viral diseases which contributed to the mass extinction:
For example during the K/T extinction, the die off was not instantaneous but followed a pattern suggestive of spreading contagion. In fact, basing their findings on pathogens found within amber-entombed insects, Poinard has concluded that the extinction of the dinosaurs was due to "the cumulative, cascading effects of many diseases.
Poinard gave more details about how pathogens eradicated the
dinosaurs along with numerous other
Cretaceous species:
insect-vectored fungal and
viral diseases were critical in determining which plants
lived and
died in the Cretaceous world.
[7]
According to
Poinar, insect-borne
viruses, infected plants that, in turn, infected the
dinosaurs:
Since extant aphids carry approximately 50% of insect-transmitted plant
viruses, perhaps they were responsible for the rapid turnover of Late Cretaceous plant lineages.
[8]
The
K/T event is not the only mass extinction marked by the destructive activity of viruses. The cometary event that triggered the
Younger Dryas 12,900 years ago, eradicated most of the
woolly mammoths[9], but left pockets of survivors in
Wrangel Island[10] who survived until ca. 4,200 BP
[11]
© CC BY-SA 3.0
Location of Wrangel Island
The DNA of the W
rangel Island mammoths revealed some peculiarities:
Here, we show that a Wrangel Island mammoth genome had many putative deleterious mutations that are predicted to cause diverse behavioral and developmental defects. Resurrection and functional characterization of several genes from the Wrangel Island mammoth carrying putatively deleterious substitutions identified both loss and gain of function mutations in genes […] These data suggest that at least one Wrangel Island mammoth may have suffered adverse consequences from reduced population size and isolation.
[12]
Now, the mutations found in the
mammoths of Wrangel Island are attributed to the scarce population and the subsequent inbreeding. However inbreeding doesn’t cause genetic defects per se but only increase the risk of recessive gene disorders
[13].
More importantly, the wooly
mammoths from Wrangel Island revealed
gain of function mutations, which is difficult to explain by an inbreeding process, but, as shown later
[14], can easily be induced by
viruses.
According to the senior curator of the
American Museum of Natural History, Ross MacPhee it is indeed a viral epidemics
[15] that caused the demise of the
mammoth of Wrangler Island:
After reading a magazine article about the Ebola virus outbreak, MacPhee was struck by a sudden insight: the only thing capable of causing extinctions of this type [Wranglel Island] and scale was a highly lethal infectious disease.
[16]
Coincidentally or not, the comet-induced
Younger Dryas was coeval with the apparition of the deadliest virus for humans, the smallpox:
Smallpox (Variola major & minor) is an epidemic disease caused by a virus that plagued humanity for millennia. In fact, it was the first and only disease ever intentionally eradicated from the face of our planet. Historians speculate that it appeared around 10,000 BC [12,000 BP] in the agricultural settlements of NE Africa
[17]
During the 20th century only, smallpox is estimated to have killed 500 million people
[18]. But along its deadliness, smallpox conferred to its surviving carriers some benefits (gain-of-functions), for example a natural immunity to the HIV virus
[19].
Even hominid species seem to have been affected by virus-induced extinction.
Neanderthal became extinct ca. 28,000 years BP
[20] after at least 100,000 years
[21] of successful adaptation. The pattern of their extinction suggests that it was, at least partly, caused by viral diseases:
We investigated whether the evolutionary history of AMHs and the Neanderthals matches the time and place of origin and evolution of some of the viral pathogens that could have played a role in Neanderthal extinction.
[22]
Notice that the
K/T extinction, the extinction of
Neanderthal, the extinction of the
Wrangler woolly mammoths happened thousands, if not millions of years ago and it concerned species that are now extinct.
So, despite several circumstantial evidence suggesting that these extinctions were virally induced there is no smoking gun. For that, proper autopsies should be conducted but in most cases there’s no corpse, only fossils. The exception is the woolly mammoth and the thousands of frozen corpses but no autopsy looking for viruses was performed yet
[23].
However, there is a number of documented and recent virus-induced extinction.
2/ Recent virus-induced extinction
The role played by viruses in some extinctions, has been repeatedly confirmed by observation of contemporary extinctions. For example, infectious diseases are the main driver of the ongoing extinction of some critically endangered
amphibians:
[…] amphibians account for 30% of critically endangered animals and that they also comprise approximately 75% of critically endangered species threatened by disease. Although ranavirus infections, trematode infestations, and several other pathogen threats have been proposed as driving particular cases of decline, the agent thought to contribute most widely to amphibian endangerment is Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, first identified in the 1990s as the cause of a fatal chytridiomycosis.
[24]
Amphibians are not an isolated case, the same goes for the extinction of 18 contemporary
bird species:
18 examples of bird extinctions and extirpations that have been attributed at least partly to infectious diseases. […] Warner proposed that these losses were due to panzootics caused by the inadvertent introduction of Culex quinquefasciatus, a vector of avian malaria (Plasmodium relictum). Another lethal agent, presumably introduced as well, was avian pox (Poxvirus avium).
[25]
Mammals are also affected; with for example, the extinction of the endemic species of rats from
Christmas Island because of infectious disease:
The Christmas Island rat is completely extinct and its genetic endowment has not persisted in any form. Genetic evidence of the murid-specific trypanosome Trypanosoma lewisi was found in the true black rat and the Christmas Island rat samples. In samples of the bulldog rat, all collected earlier than 1899, no evidence of trypanosome infection could be found. Thus, detection of trypanosomes correlates with the arrival of invasive black rats and the subsequent extinction of the native rat species on Christmas Island (only inferential in the case of the bulldog rat).
[26]
The extinct endemic Christmas Island rat (Rattus macleari)
The discovery of recent virus-induced extinctions led to a paradigm shift where viruses are now considered as potential agents of extinction:
Infectious disease, especially virulent infectious disease, is commonly regarded as a cause of fluctuation or decline in biological populations. However, it is not generally considered as a primary factor in causing the actual endangerment or extinction of species. We review here the known historical examples in which disease has, or has been assumed to have had, a major deleterious impact on animal species, including extinction, and highlight some recent cases in which disease is the chief suspect in causing the outright endangerment of particular species. We conclude that the role of disease in historical extinctions at the population or species level may have been underestimated.
[27]
Nowadays, infectious disease is officially listed among the top five causes of global species extinctions
[28].
3/ Are Viruses extinction agents past and present?
The suspected involvement of virus in past extinction like
Wrangler mammoths,
Neanderthal or the
K/T event combined with the observation of recent extinctions caused by viruses among
amphibians,
birds and
mammals have led some researchers to think that viral infections are the cause of other past extinctions recorded in fossil records:
In 1981 I suggested that the sudden, individual disappearance of an established species could result from viral action […] extinction is usually rapid (i.e., geologically instantaneous) and synchronous over vast areas; and the sympatric
[29] species are not affected.
[30]
This idea exposed in the above quote according to which viral diseases can be a contributing agent or even the sole cause of extinction of given species was submitted in 1995 but it is not new. It was already theorized more than three centuries ago to explain the extinction of the Irish giant deer
[31]:
By what means [the Irish giant deer] formerly so common and numerous in this Country, should now become utterly lost and extinct, deserves our Consideration [Despite accepted explanations,] it seems more likely to me, this kind of Animal might become extinct here from a certain ill Constitution of Air in some of the past Seasons long since the Flood, which might occasion an Epidemick Distemper; if we may so call it, or Pestilential Murren, peculiarly to affect this sort of Creature, so as to destroy at once great numbers of them, if not quite ruin the species.
[32]
© Imgur
Irish giant deer (Megaloceros giganteus) reconstruction
Unlike this centuries-old quote and until recently, modern science tended to ignore the role played by infectious diseases in extinction events.
This position changed with the advent of genomics and the identification and tracking of viruses in extinct and extant species. The role played by viruses in past extinctions led some researchers to theorize that the
host-specific viral action was both the cause of extinctions AND the main driver of evolution:
Every few million years a mass extinction occurs--the disappearance of a number of taxa apparently caused by an environmental upset of some kind. These events are used by stratigraphers to subdivide geologic time. Interspersed between mass extinctions are the background extinctions, the individual extinctions of well-established species while the sympatric species exhibit no sign of stress.
It is hypothesized that background extinctions are caused by host-specific viral action. It is further hypothesized that background extinctions are a fundamental component of the process of evolution.
[33]
The host-specific viral action exposed in the above quote would reconcile and explain the two seemingly opposite aspects exhibited by mass extinctions:
on one hand species-specific extinctions soon followed by, on the other hand, by the sudden apparition of new species.
This dual and fundamental role fulfilled by viruses make them ubiquitous, at the same time agents of creation and destruction, contributing to mass extinction through rampant diseases and also contributing to genetic “upgrades” leading to the apparition of new and more complex species.
From this perspective viruses seem to be the main driver of an intelligent evolution directed towards increased complexity
[34]. Like the master in the parable of the talents, viruses contribute to the eradication of some “obsolete” species and “pay back” the “valuable” species with an evolutionary leap.
The Parable of Talents on the stained glass in St Mary Abbot`s church on Kensington High Street.
Now if viruses are the drivers of life, could they also be its initiators? The following three chapters will illustrate the fundamental role played by viruses in life, their astounding seniority, their pervasiveness on planet Earth and each lifeform that roams it, and the numerous benefits, they provide to these lifeforms.
[1] Chapter 10 “Species-Specific Eradication or Enhancement”
[2] See Part I: “Comets and Mass Extinctions” and Part II, chapter “The K/T boundary”
[3] Casadevall, A (2012) “Fungi and the Rise of Mammals” PLoS Pathog 8(8): e1002808
[4] Lips K. R. (2016) “Overview of chytrid emergence and impacts on amphibians”. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London 371(1709), 20150465
[5] Poinar, G. & Poinar, R. (2007) “What Bugged the Dinosaurs? Insects, Disease, and Death in the Cretaceous” Princeton University Press
[6] Emiliani C. (1993) “Extinction and viruses” Bio Systems, 31(2-3), 155–159
[7] George Poinar, Roberta Poinar. (2008) “What Bugged the Dinosaurs?: Insects, Disease, and Death in the Cretaceous” Princeton University Press
[8] Ibid
[9] Pierre Lescaudron (2021). “Cometary Encounters”, Red Pill Press. Part I “The Flash-frozen Mammoths”
[10] Arctic island located in the East Siberian Sea
[11] Vartanyan, S.L. et al. (1995). "Radiocarbon Dating Evidence for Mammoths on Wrangel Island, Arctic Ocean, until 2000 BC". Radiocarbon. 37 (1): 1–6.
[12] Erin Fry et al. (2020). “Functional Architecture of Deleterious Genetic Variants in the Genome of a Wrangel Island Mammoth”, Genome Biology and Evolution, Volume 12, Issue 3, March, Pages 48–58
[13] Nabulsi MM. et al. (2003) "Parental consanguinity and congenital heart malformations in a developing country" American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 116A (4): 342–7
[14] See chapter “Beneficial Viruses”
[15] MacPhee, R. D. E.; Marx, P. A. (1997) “The 40,000-Year Plague: Humans, Hyperdisease, and First-Contact Extinctions” Natural and human induced change in Madagascar ; 169-217
[16] Robert Payo (2009) “What Killed the Mammoths? Ross MacPhee Looks for Answers” Ohio State University
[17] Amanda Laoupi (2016) “Fires from Heaven. Comets and diseases in circum-Mediterranean Disaster Myths” Centre for the Assessment of Natural Hazards & Proactive Planning – NTUA
[18] David A. Koplow (2003) “Smallpox—The Fight to Eradicate a Global Scourge” Berkeley University of California Press
[19] Alison P. Galvani (2003) ”Evaluating plague and smallpox as historical selective pressures for the CCR5-Δ32 HIV-resistance allele” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
[20] Delson, E. Harvati, K. (2006) “Return of the last Neanderthal” Nature 443, 762–763
[21] Klein, R. (1983) "What Do We Know About Neanderthals and Cro-Magnon Man?". Anthropology 52 (3): 386–392
[22] Wolff, H. et al. (2010) “Did viral disease of humans wipe out the Neandertals?” Medical hypotheses 75(1), 99–105
[23] Tia Ghose (2014) “Can the Long-Extinct Woolly Mammoth Be Cloned?” Livescience
[24] Ross D. E. et al. (2013) "Infectious Disease, Endangerment, and Extinction" International Journal of Evolutionary Biology
[25] Ibid
[26] Ibid
[27] Macphee, R. et al. (2013) “Infectious Disease, Endangerment, and Extinction” International journal of evolutionary biology 571939
[28] Smith KF. et al. (2006) “Evidence for the role of infectious disease in species extinction and endangerment” Conserv. Biol. 20(5):1349-57
[29] The term “sympatric” stands for living in the same geographic area
[30] Emiliani, C. (1995) “Evolution--a composite model“ Evolutionary Theory Vol.10 No.6 299-303
[31] One of the largest deer that ever lived. Its range extended from Ireland to Siberia. The most recent remains have been dated to 7,700 BP.
See: Stuart, A.J. et al. (2004). "Pleistocene to Holocene extinction dynamics in giant deer and woolly mammoth" Nature 431 (7009): 684–689
[32] Quigley, K. (2017). “Boggy Geography and an Irish Moose: Thomas Molyneux’s New World Neighborhood” The Eighteenth Century, 58(4), 385-406
[33] Emiliani C. (1993) “Extinction and viruses” Biosystems;31(2-3):155-9
[34] In this context, “Complexity” stands for “information processing capability” as explained in Part V & Part VI