http://m.geology.gsapubs.org/content/early/2014/07/14/G35825.1

Ants as a powerful biotic agent of olivine and plagioclase dissolution

Abstract

The biotic enhancement of Ca-Mg silicate weathering has helped maintain
Earth's habitability over geological time scales by assisting in the
gradual drawdown of atmospheric CO2. 25 years of in-situ measurements of
Ca-Mg silicate mineral dissolution by ants, termites, root mats, bare
ground, and a control reveals ants to be one of the most powerful biotic
weathering agents yet recognized. Six sites in Arizona and Texas (USA)
indicate that eight different ant species enhance mineral dissolution by
∼50×–300× over controls. A comparison of extracted soil at a 50 cm depth in
ant colonies and adjacent bare ground shows a gradual accumulation of
CaCO3 content for all eight ant species over 25 yr. Ants, thus, have
potential to provide clues on how to enhance contemporary carbon
sequestration efforts to transform Ca-Mg silicates and CO2 into carbonate.
Given that ants underwent a great diversification and biomass expansion
over the Cenozoic, a speculative implication of this research is that ant
enhancement of Ca-Mg silicate dissolution might have been an influence on
Cenozoic cooling.

First published online July 14, 2014, doi: 10.1130/G35825.1

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