“The entire marine exosystem suffered a major collapse. Reef-forming corals were decimated.”
For this to happen I think that there must have been significant changes in water temperature, chemistry and oxygen content. The invasive species would then have multiplied and moved in on areas where less adaptable organisms died out. My guess is a large boloid event.
After the great dying of the Permian extinction event, Lystrosaurus, a piglike reptilian, was so abundant in South Africa “palaeontologists cry with frustration when they find another Lystrosaurus skull.” “it dominated the whole world for a short time...also from South America, Antarctica, India, China, Russia” [from “When Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of all Time”, Michael J. Benton, 2003]
Asteroid 'destroyed life 250m years ago'Earth's biggest mass extinction 251 million years ago was triggered by a collision with a comet or asteroid, US scientists say. They have reached this conclusion by looking at atoms from a star trapped inside molecular cages of carbon...
by Dr David Whitehouse
Friday, February 23, 2001
In rock layers laid down at the time, there is a much higher concentration of complex carbon molecules called fullerenes that have different types, or isotopes, of helium and argon trapped inside them. These molecules could only have been delivered from space, the researchers say...
The researchers believe these particular fullerenes are extraterrestrial because the gases trapped inside have an unusual ratio of isotopes that indicate they were made in the atmosphere of a star that exploded before our Sun was born...
The telltale fullerenes were extracted from sites in Japan, China and Hungary, where the sedimentary layer at the boundary between the Permian and Triassic periods had been exposed...
The research was made difficult because there are few 251-million-year-old rocks left on Earth. Most rocks of that age have been recycled through the planet's tectonic processes...
Researchers estimate the comet or asteroid was six to 12 km (3.7 - 7.4 miles) across, or about the size of the asteroid believed responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs 67 million years ago...
The mass extinction of 251 million years ago was the greatest on record.