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History of life

The history of life on Earth traces the processes by which living and fossil organisms evolved, from the earliest emergence of life to present day. Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago (abbreviated as Ga, for gigaannum) and evidence suggests that life emerged prior to 3.7 Ga.[1][2][3] The similarities among all known present-day species indicate that they have diverged through the process of evolution from a common ancestor.[4]

The earliest clear evidence of life comes from biogenic carbon signatures[2][3] and stromatolite fossils[5] discovered in 3.7 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks from western Greenland. In 2015, possible "remains of biotic life" were found in 4.1 billion-year-old rocks in Western Australia.[6][7] There is further evidence of possibly the oldest forms of life in the form of fossilized microorganisms in hydrothermal vent precipitates from the Nuvvuagittuq Belt, that may have lived as early as 4.28 billion years ago, not long after the oceans formed 4.4 billion years ago, and after the Earth formed 4.54 billion years ago.[8][9] These earliest fossils, however, may have originated from non-biological processes.[1][10][7][11]

Microbial mats of coexisting bacteria and archaea were the dominant form of life in the early Archean eon, and many of the major steps in early evolution are thought to have taken place in this environment.[12] The evolution of photosynthesis by cyanobacteria, around 3.5 Ga, eventually led to a buildup of its waste product, oxygen, in the oceans. After free oxygen saturated all available reductant substances on the Earth's surface, it built up in the atmosphere, leading to the Great Oxygenation Event around 2.4 Ga.[13] The earliest evidence of eukaryotes (complex cells with organelles) dates from 1.85 Ga,[14][15] likely due to symbiogenesis between anaerobic archaea and aerobic proteobacteria in co-adaptation against the new oxidative stress. While eukaryotes may have been present earlier, their diversification accelerated when aerobic cellular respiration by the endosymbiont mitochondria provided a more abundant source of biological energy. Around 1.6 Ga, some eukaryotes gained the ability to photosynthesize via endosymbiosis with cyanobacteria, and gave rise to various algae that eventually overtook cyanobacteria as the dominant primary producers.

At around 1.7 Ga, multicellular organisms began to appear, with differentiated cells performing specialised functions.[16] While early organisms reproduced asexually, the primary method of reproduction for the vast majority of macroscopic organisms, including almost all eukaryotes (which includes animals and plants), is sexual reproduction, the fusion of male and female reproductive cells (gametes) to create a zygote.[17] The origin and evolution of sexual reproduction remain a puzzle for biologists, though it is thought to have evolved from a single-celled eukaryotic ancestor.[18]

While microorganisms formed the earliest terrestrial ecosystems at least 2.7 Ga, the evolution of plants from freshwater green algae dates back to about 1 billion years ago.[19][20] Microorganisms are thought to have paved the way for the inception of land plants in the Ordovician period. Land plants were so successful that they are thought to have contributed to the Late Devonian extinction event[21] as early tree archaeopteris drew down CO2 levels, leading to global cooling and lowered sea levels, while their roots increased rock weathering and nutrient run-offs which may have triggered algal bloom anoxic events.

Bilateria, animals having a left and a right side that are mirror images of each other, appeared by 555 Ma (million years ago).[22] Ediacara biota appeared during the Ediacaran period,[23] while vertebrates, along with most other modern phyla originated about 525 Ma during the Cambrian explosion.[24] During the Permian period, synapsids, including the ancestors of mammals, dominated the land.[25]

The Permian–Triassic extinction event killed most complex species of its time, 252 Ma.[26] During the recovery from this catastrophe, archosaurs became the most abundant land vertebrates;[27] one archosaur group, the dinosaurs, dominated the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods.[28] After the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event 66 Ma killed off the non-avian dinosaurs,[29] mammals increased rapidly in size and diversity.[30] Such mass extinctions may have accelerated evolution by providing opportunities for new groups of organisms to diversify.[31]

Only a very small percentage of species have been identified: one estimate claims that Earth may have 1 trillion species, because "identifying every microbial species on Earth presents a huge challenge."[32][33] Only 1.75–1.8 million species have been named[34][35] and 1.8 million documented in a central database.[36] The currently living species represent less than one percent of all species that have ever lived on Earth.[37][38]



Earliest history of Earth edit

The oldest meteorite fragments found on Earth are about 4.54 billion years old; this, coupled primarily with the dating of ancient lead deposits, has put the estimated age of Earth at around that time.[43] The Moon has the same composition as Earth's crust but does not contain an iron-rich core like the Earth's. Many scientists think that about 40 million years after the formation of Earth, it collided with a body the size of Mars, throwing crust material into the orbit that formed the Moon. Another hypothesis is that the Earth and Moon started to coalesce at the same time but the Earth, having a much stronger gravity than the early Moon, attracted almost all the iron particles in the area.[44]

Until 2001, the oldest rocks found on Earth were about 3.8 billion years old,[45][43] leading scientists to estimate that the Earth's surface had been molten until then. Accordingly, they named this part of Earth's history the Hadean.[46] However, analysis of zircons formed 4.4 Ga indicates that Earth's crust solidified about 100 million years after the planet's formation and that the planet quickly acquired oceans and an atmosphere, which may have been capable of supporting life.[47][48][49]

Evidence from the Moon indicates that from 4 to 3.8 Ga it suffered a Late Heavy Bombardment by debris that was left over from the formation of the Solar System, and the Earth should have experienced an even heavier bombardment due to its stronger gravity.[46][50] While there is no direct evidence of conditions on Earth 4 to 3.8 Ga, there is no reason to think that the Earth was not also affected by this late heavy bombardment.[51] This event may well have stripped away any previous atmosphere and oceans; in this case gases and water from comet impacts may have contributed to their replacement, although outgassing from volcanoes on Earth would have supplied at least half.[52] However, if subsurface microbial life had evolved by this point, it would have survived the bombardment.[53]

Earliest evidence for life on Earth edit

The earliest identified organisms were minute and relatively featureless, and their fossils looked like small rods that are very difficult to tell apart from structures that arise through abiotic physical processes. The oldest undisputed evidence of life on Earth, interpreted as fossilized bacteria, dates to 3 Ga.[54] Other finds in rocks dated to about 3.5 Ga have been interpreted as bacteria,[55] with geochemical evidence also seeming to show the presence of life 3.8 Ga.[56] However, these analyses were closely scrutinized, and non-biological processes were found which could produce all of the "signatures of life" that had been reported.[57][58] While this does not prove that the structures found had a non-biological origin, they cannot be taken as clear evidence for the presence of life. Geochemical signatures from rocks deposited 3.4 Ga have been interpreted as evidence for life,[54][59] although these statements have not been thoroughly examined by critics.

Evidence for fossilized microorganisms considered to be 3.77 billion to 4.28 billion years old was found in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt in Quebec, Canada,[8] although the evidence is disputed as inconclusive.[60]

Origins of life on Earth edit

 EuryarchaeotaNanoarchaeotaThermoproteotaProtozoaAlgaePlantSlime moldsAnimalFungusGram-positive bacteriaChlamydiotaChloroflexotaActinomycetotaPlanctomycetotaSpirochaetotaFusobacteriotaCyanobacteriaThermophilesAcidobacteriotaPseudomonadota
Evolutionary tree showing the divergence of modern species from their common ancestor in the center.[61] The three domains are colored, with bacteria blue, archaea green, and eukaryotes red.

Some biologists reason that all living organisms on Earth must share a single last universal ancestor, because it would be virtually impossible that two or more separate lineages could have independently developed the many complex biochemical mechanisms common to all living organisms.[62][63]

According to a different scenario[64][65][66] a single last universal ancestor, e.g. a "first cell" or a first individual precursor cell has never existed. Instead, the early biochemical evolution of life[67] led to diversification through the development of a multiphenotypical population of pre-cells from which the precursor cells (protocells) of the three domains of life[68] emerged. Thus, the formation of cells was a successive process. See § Metabolism first: Pre-cells, successive cellularisation, below.

Independent emergence on Earth edit

Life on Earth is based on carbon and water. Carbon provides stable frameworks for complex chemicals and can be easily extracted from the environment, especially from carbon dioxide.[49] There is no other chemical element whose properties are similar enough to carbon's to be called an analogue; silicon, the element directly below carbon on the periodic table, does not form very many complex stable molecules, and because most of its compounds are water-insoluble and because silicon dioxide is a hard and abrasive solid in contrast to carbon dioxide at temperatures associated with living things, it would be more difficult for organisms to extract. The elements boron and phosphorus have more complex chemistries but suffer from other limitations relative to carbon. Water is an excellent solvent and has two other useful properties: the fact that ice floats enables aquatic organisms to survive beneath it in winter; and its molecules have electrically negative and positive ends, which enables it to form a wider range of compounds than other solvents can. Other good solvents, such as ammonia, are liquid only at such low temperatures that chemical reactions may be too slow to sustain life, and lack water's other advantages.[69] Organisms based on alternative biochemistry may, however, be possible on other planets.[70]

Research on how life might have emerged from non-living chemicals focuses on three possible starting points: self-replication, an organism's ability to produce offspring that are very similar to itself; metabolism, its ability to feed and repair itself; and external cell membranes, which allow food to enter and waste products to leave, but exclude unwanted substances.[71] Research on abiogenesis still has a long way to go, since theoretical and empirical approaches are only beginning to make contact with each other.[72][73]

Replication first: RNA world edit

Even the simplest members of the three modern domains of life use DNA to record their "recipes" and a complex array of RNA and protein molecules to "read" these instructions and use them for growth, maintenance and self-replication. The discovery that some RNA molecules can catalyze both their own replication and the construction of proteins led to the hypothesis of earlier life-forms based entirely on RNA.[74] These ribozymes could have formed an RNA world in which there were individuals but no species, as mutations and horizontal gene transfers would have meant that offspring were likely to have different genomes from their parents, and evolution occurred at the level of genes rather than organisms.[75] RNA would later have been replaced by DNA, which can build longer, more stable genomes, strengthening heritability and expanding the capabilities of individual organisms.[75][76][77] Ribozymes remain as the main components of ribosomes, the "protein factories" in modern cells.[78] Evidence suggests the first RNA molecules formed on Earth prior to 4.17 Ga.[79]

Although short self-replicating RNA molecules have been artificially produced in laboratories,[80] doubts have been raised about whether natural non-biological synthesis of RNA is possible.[81] The earliest "ribozymes" may have been formed of simpler nucleic acids such as PNA, TNA or GNA, which would have been replaced later by RNA.[82][83]

In 2003, it was proposed that porous metal sulfide precipitates would assist RNA synthesis at about 100 °C (212 °F) and ocean-bottom pressures near hydrothermal vents. Under this hypothesis, lipid membranes would be the last major cell components to appear and, until then, the protocells would be confined to the pores.[84]

Membranes first: Lipid world edit

 
  = water-attracting heads of lipid molecules
  = water-repellent tails
 
Cross-section through a liposome

It has been suggested that double-walled "bubbles" of lipids like those that form the external membranes of cells may have been an essential first step.[85] Experiments that simulated the conditions of the early Earth have reported the formation of lipids, and these can spontaneously form liposomes, double-walled "bubbles", and then reproduce themselves.[49] Although they are not intrinsically information-carriers as nucleic acids are, they would be subject to natural selection for longevity and reproduction. Nucleic acids such as RNA might then have formed more easily within the liposomes than outside.[86]

The clay hypothesis edit

RNA is complex and there are doubts about whether it can be produced non-biologically in the wild.[81] Some clays, notably montmorillonite, have properties that make them plausible accelerators for the emergence of an RNA world: they grow by self-replication of their crystalline pattern; they are subject to an analogue of natural selection, as the clay "species" that grows fastest in a particular environment rapidly becomes dominant; and they can catalyze the formation of RNA molecules.[87] Although this idea has not become the scientific consensus, it still has active supporters.[88]

Research in 2003 reported that montmorillonite could also accelerate the conversion of fatty acids into "bubbles" and that the "bubbles" could encapsulate RNA attached to the clay. These "bubbles" can then grow by absorbing additional lipids and then divide. The formation of the earliest cells may have been aided by similar processes.[89]

A similar hypothesis presents self-replicating iron-rich clays as the progenitors of nucleotides, lipids and amino acids.[90]

Metabolism first: Iron–sulfur world edit

A series of experiments starting in 1997 showed that early stages in the formation of proteins from inorganic materials including carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide could be achieved by using iron sulfide and nickel sulfide as catalysts. Most of the steps required temperatures of about 100 °C (212 °F) and moderate pressures, although one stage required 250 °C (482 °F) and a pressure equivalent to that found under 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) of rock. Hence it was suggested that self-sustaining synthesis of proteins could have occurred near hydrothermal vents.[67]

Metabolism first: Pre–cells (successive cellularisation) edit

In this scenario, the biochemical evolution of life[67] led to diversification through the development of a multiphenotypical population of pre-cells,[64][65][66] i.e. evolving entities of primordial life with different characteristics and wide-spread horizontal gene transfer.

 
Early diversification of life with Kandler's pre-cell theory (Kandler 1998, p. 22)[66]

From this pre-cell population the founder groups A, B, C and then, from them, the precursor cells (here named proto-cells) of the three domains of life[68] arose successively, leading first to the domain Bacteria, then to the domain Archea and finally to the domain Eucarya.

For the development of cells (cellularisation), the pre-cells had to be protected from their surroundings by envelopes (i.e. membranes, walls). For instance, the development of rigid cell walls by the invention of peptidoglycan in bacteria (domain Bacteria) may have been a prerequisite for their successful survival, radiation and colonisation of virtually all habitats of the geosphere and hydrosphere.[66]

This scenario may explain the quasi-random distribution of evolutionarily important features among the three domains and, at the same time, the existence of the most basic biochemical features (genetic code, set of protein amino acids etc.) in all three domains (unity of life), as well as the close relationship between the Archaea and the Eucarya. A scheme of the pre-cell scenario is shown in the adjacent figure,[66] where important evolutionary improvements are indicated by numbers.

Prebiotic environments edit

Geothermal springs edit

Wet-dry cycles at geothermal springs are shown to solve the problem of hydrolysis and promote the polymerization and vesicle encapsulation of biopolymers.[91][92] The temperatures of geothermal springs are suitable for biomolecules.[93] Silica minerals and metal sulfides in these environments have photocatalytic properties to catalyze biomolecules. Solar UV exposure also promotes the synthesis of biomolecules like RNA nucleotides.[94][95] An analysis of hydrothermal veins at a 3.5 Gya geothermal spring setting were found to have elements required for the origin of life, which are potassium, boron, hydrogen, sulfur, phosphorus, zinc, nitrogen, and oxygen.[96] Mulkidjanian and colleagues find that such environments have identical ionic concentrations to the cytoplasm of modern cells.[94] Fatty acids in acidic or slightly alkaline geothermal springs assemble into vesicles after wet-dry cycles as there is a lower concentration of ionic solutes at geothermal springs since they are freshwater environments, in contrast to seawater which has a higher concentration of ionic solutes.[97] For organic compounds to be present at geothermal springs, they would have likely been transported by carbonaceous meteors. The molecules that fell from the meteors were then accumulated in geothermal springs. Geothermal springs can accumulate aqueous phosphate in the form of phopshoric acid. Based on lab-run models, these concentrations of phoshate are insufficient to facilitate biosynthesis.[98] As for the evolutionary implications, freshwater heterotrophic cells that depended upon synthesized organic compounds later evolved photosynthesis because of the continuous exposure to sunlight as well as their cell walls with ion pumps to maintain their intracellular metabolism after they entered the oceans.[92]

Deep sea hydrothermal vents edit

Catalytic mineral particles and transition metal sulfides at these environments are capable of catalyzing organic compounds.[99] Scientists simulated laboratory conditions that were identical to white smokers and successfully oligomerized RNA, measured to be 4 units long.[100] Long chain fatty acids can be synthesized via Fischer-Tropsch synthesis.[101] Another experiment that replicated conditions also similar white smokers, with long chain fatty acids present resulted in the assembly of vesicles.[102] Exergonic reactions at hydrothermal vents are suggested to have been a source of free energy that promoted chemical reactions, synthesis of organic molecules, and are inducive to chemical gradients.[103] In small rock pore systems, membranous structures between alkaline seawater and the acidic ocean would be conducive to natural proton gradients.[104] Nucleobase synthesis could occur by following universally conserved biochemical pathways by using metal ions as catalysts.[101] RNA molecules of 22 bases can be polymerized in alkaline hydrothermal vent pores. Thin pores are shown to only accumulate long polynucleotides whereas thick pores accumulate both short and long polynucleotides. Small mineral cavities or mineral gels could have been a compartment for abiogenic processes.[105][106][107] A genomic analysis supports this hypothesis as they found 355 genes that likely traced to LUCA upon 6.1 million sequenced prokaryotic genes. They reconstruct LUCA as a thermophilic anaerobe with a Wood-Ljungdahl pathway, implying an origin of life at white smokers. LUCA would also have exhibited other biochemical pathways such as gluconeogenesis, reverse incomplete Krebs cycle, glycolysis, and the pentose phosphate pathway, including biochemical reactions such as reductive amination and transamination.[108][109][101][110]

Life "seeded" from elsewhere edit

The Panspermia hypothesis does not explain how life arose originally, but simply examines the possibility of its coming from somewhere other than Earth. The idea that life on Earth was "seeded" from elsewhere in the Universe dates back at least to the Greek philosopher Anaximander in the sixth century BCE.[111] In the twentieth century it was proposed by the physical chemist Svante Arrhenius,[112] by the astronomers Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe,[113] and by molecular biologist Francis Crick and chemist Leslie Orgel.[114]

 
Potential bacterial fossils found on the Allan Hills Meteorite

There are three main versions of the "seeded from elsewhere" hypothesis: from elsewhere in our Solar System via fragments knocked into space by a large meteor impact, in which case the most credible sources are Mars[115] and Venus;[116] by alien visitors, possibly as a result of accidental contamination by microorganisms that they brought with them;[114] and from outside the Solar System but by natural means.[112][115]

Experiments in low Earth orbit, such as EXOSTACK, have demonstrated that some microorganism spores can survive the shock of being catapulted into space and some can survive exposure to outer space radiation for at least 5.7 years.[117][118] Meteorite ALH84001, which was once part of the Martian crust, shows evidence of carbonate-globules with texture and size indicative of terrestrial bacterial activity.[119] Scientists are divided over the likelihood of life arising independently on Mars,[120] or on other planets in our galaxy.[115]

Carbonate-rich lakes edit

One theory traces the origins of life to the abundant carbonate-rich lakes which would have dotted the early Earth. Phosphate would have been an essential cornerstone to the origin of life since it is a critical component of nucleotides, phospholipids, and adenosine triphosphate.[121] Phosphate is often depleted in natural environments due to its uptake by microbes and its affinity for calcium ions. In a process called 'apatite precipitation', free phosphate ions react with the calcium ions abundant in water to precipitate out of solution as apatite minerals.[121] When attempting to simulate prebiotic phosphorylation, scientists have only found success when using phosphorus levels far above modern day natural concentrations.[98]

This problem of low phosphate is solved in carbonate-rich environments. When in the presence of carbonate, calcium readily reacts to form calcium carbonate instead of apatite minerals.[122] With the free calcium ions removed from solution, phosphate ions are no longer precipitated from solution.[122] This is specifically seen in lakes with no inflow, since no new calcium is introduced into the water body.[98] After all of the calcium is sequestered into calcium carbonate (calcite), phosphate concentrations are able to increase to levels necessary for facilitating biomolecule creation.[123]

Though carbonate-rich lakes have alkaline chemistry in modern times, models suggest that carbonate lakes had a pH low enough for prebiotic synthesis when placed in the acidifying context of Earth's early carbon dioxide rich atmosphere.[98] Rainwater rich in carbonic acid weathered the rock on the surface of the Earth at rates far greater than today.[124] With high phosphate influx, no phosphate precipitation, and no microbial usage of phosphate at this time, models show phosphate reached concentrations approximately 100 times greater than they are today.[98] Modeled pH and phosphate levels of early Earth carbonate-rich lakes nearly match the conditions used in current laboratory experiments on the origin of life.[98]

Similar to the process predicted by geothermal hot spring hypotheses, changing lake levels and wave action deposited phosphorus-rich brine onto dry shore and marginal pools.[125] This drying of the solution promotes polymerization reactions and removes enough water to promote phosphorylation, a process integral to biological energy storage and transfer.[98][125][126] When washed away by further precipitation and wave action, researchers concluded these newly formed biomolecules may have washed back into the lake - allowing the first prebiotic syntheses on Earth to occur.[98]

Environmental and evolutionary impact of microbial mats edit

 
Modern stromatolites in Shark Bay, Western Australia

Microbial mats are multi-layered, multi-species colonies of bacteria and other organisms that are generally only a few millimeters thick, but still contain a wide range of chemical environments, each of which favors a different set of microorganisms.[127] To some extent each mat forms its own food chain, as the by-products of each group of microorganisms generally serve as "food" for adjacent groups.[128]

 
Traces like Epibaion from the Ediacaran represent trace fossils of feeding and movement by members of the phylum proarticulata

Stromatolites are stubby pillars built as microorganisms in mats slowly migrate upwards to avoid being smothered by sediment deposited on them by water.[127] There has been vigorous debate about the validity of alleged stromatolite fossils from before 3 Ga,[129] with critics arguing that they could have been formed by non-biological processes.[57] In 2006, another find of stromatolites was reported from the same part of Australia, in rocks dated to 3.5 Ga.[130]

In modern underwater mats the top layer often consists of photosynthesizing cyanobacteria which create an oxygen-rich environment, while the bottom layer is oxygen-free and often dominated by hydrogen sulfide emitted by the organisms living there.[128] Oxygen is toxic to organisms that are not adapted to it, but greatly increases the metabolic efficiency of oxygen-adapted organisms;[131][132] oxygenic photosynthesis by bacteria in mats increased biological productivity by a factor of between 100 and 1,000. The source of hydrogen atoms used by oxygenic photosynthesis is water, which is much more plentiful than the geologically produced reducing agents required by the earlier non-oxygenic photosynthesis.[133] From this point onwards life itself produced significantly more of the resources it needed than did geochemical processes.[134]

Oxygen became a significant component of Earth's atmosphere about 2.4 Ga.[135] Although eukaryotes may have been present much earlier,[136][137] the oxygenation of the atmosphere was a prerequisite for the evolution of the most complex eukaryotic cells, from which all multicellular organisms are built.[138] The boundary between oxygen-rich and oxygen-free layers in microbial mats would have moved upwards when photosynthesis shut down overnight, and then downwards as it resumed on the next day. This would have created selection pressure for organisms in this intermediate zone to acquire the ability to tolerate and then to use oxygen, possibly via endosymbiosis, where one organism lives inside another and both of them benefit from their association.[12]

Cyanobacteria have the most complete biochemical "toolkits" of all the mat-forming organisms. Hence they are the most self-sufficient, well-adapted to strike out on their own both as floating mats and as the first of the phytoplankton, provide the basis of most marine food chains.[12]

Diversification of eukaryotes edit

Chromatin, nucleus, endomembrane system, and mitochondria edit

Eukaryotes may have been present long before the oxygenation of the atmosphere,[136] but most modern eukaryotes require oxygen, which is used by their mitochondria to fuel the production of ATP, the internal energy supply of all known cells.[138] In the 1970s, a vigorous debate concluded that eukaryotes emerged as a result of a sequence of endosymbiosis between prokaryotes. For example: a predatory microorganism invaded a large prokaryote, probably an archaean, but instead of killing its prey, the attacker took up residence and evolved into mitochondria; one of these chimeras later tried to swallow a photosynthesizing cyanobacterium, but the victim survived inside the attacker and the new combination became the ancestor of plants; and so on. After each endosymbiosis, the partners eventually eliminated unproductive duplication of genetic functions by re-arranging their genomes, a process which sometimes involved transfer of genes between them.[139][140][141] Another hypothesis proposes that mitochondria were originally sulfur- or hydrogen-metabolising endosymbionts, and became oxygen-consumers later.[142] On the other hand, mitochondria might have been part of eukaryotes' original equipment.[143]

There is a debate about when eukaryotes first appeared: the presence of steranes in Australian shales may indicate eukaryotes at 2.7 Ga;[137] however, an analysis in 2008 concluded that these chemicals infiltrated the rocks less than 2.2 Ga and prove nothing about the origins of eukaryotes.[144] Fossils of the algae Grypania have been reported in 1.85 billion-year-old rocks (originally dated to 2.1 Ga but later revised[15]), indicating that eukaryotes with organelles had already evolved.[145] A diverse collection of fossil algae were found in rocks dated between 1.5 and 1.4 Ga.[146] The earliest known fossils of fungi date from 1.43 Ga.[147]

Plastids edit

Plastids, the superclass of organelles of which chloroplasts are the best-known exemplar, are thought to have originated from endosymbiotic cyanobacteria. The symbiosis evolved around 1.5 Ga and enabled eukaryotes to carry out oxygenic photosynthesis.[138] Three evolutionary lineages of photosynthetic plastids have since emerged: chloroplasts in green algae and plants, rhodoplasts in red algae and cyanelles in the glaucophytes.[148] Not long after this primary endosymbiosis of plastids, rhodoplasts and chloroplasts were passed down to other bikonts, establishing an eukaryotic assemblage of phytoplankton by the end of the Neoproterozoic Eon.

Sexual reproduction and multicellular organisms edit

Evolution of sexual reproduction edit

The defining characteristics of sexual reproduction in eukaryotes are meiosis and fertilization, resulting in genetic recombination, giving offspring 50% of their genes from each parent.[149] By contrast, in asexual reproduction there is no recombination, but occasional horizontal gene transfer. Bacteria also exchange DNA by bacterial conjugation, enabling the spread of resistance to antibiotics and other toxins, and the ability to utilize new metabolites.[150] However, conjugation is not a means of reproduction, and is not limited to members of the same species – there are cases where bacteria transfer DNA to plants and animals.[151]

On the other hand, bacterial transformation is clearly an adaptation for transfer of DNA between bacteria of the same species. This is a complex process involving the products of numerous bacterial genes and can be regarded as a bacterial form of sex.[152][153] This process occurs naturally in at least 67 prokaryotic species (in seven different phyla).[154] Sexual reproduction in eukaryotes may have evolved from bacterial transformation.[155]

The disadvantages of sexual reproduction are well-known: the genetic reshuffle of recombination may break up favorable combinations of genes; and since males do not directly increase the number of offspring in the next generation, an asexual population can out-breed and displace in as little as 50 generations a sexual population that is equal in every other respect.[149] Nevertheless, the great majority of animals, plants, fungi and protists reproduce sexually. There is strong evidence that sexual reproduction arose early in the history of eukaryotes and that the genes controlling it have changed very little since then.[156] How sexual reproduction evolved and survived is an unsolved puzzle.[157]

 
Horodyskia may have been an early metazoan,[15] or a colonial foraminiferan.[158] It apparently re-arranged itself into fewer but larger main masses as the sediment grew deeper round its base.[15]

The Red Queen hypothesis suggests that sexual reproduction provides protection against parasites, because it is easier for parasites to evolve means of overcoming the defenses of genetically identical clones than those of sexual species that present moving targets, and there is some experimental evidence for this. However, there is still doubt about whether it would explain the survival of sexual species if multiple similar clone species were present, as one of the clones may survive the attacks of parasites for long enough to out-breed the sexual species.[149] Furthermore, contrary to the expectations of the Red Queen hypothesis, Kathryn A. Hanley et al. found that the prevalence, abundance and mean intensity of mites was significantly higher in sexual geckos than in asexuals sharing the same habitat.[159] In addition, biologist Matthew Parker, after reviewing numerous genetic studies on plant disease resistance, failed to find a single example consistent with the concept that pathogens are the primary selective agent responsible for sexual reproduction in the host.[160]

Alexey Kondrashov's deterministic mutation hypothesis (DMH) assumes that each organism has more than one harmful mutation and that the combined effects of these mutations are more harmful than the sum of the harm done by each individual mutation. If so, sexual recombination of genes will reduce the harm that bad mutations do to offspring and at the same time eliminate some bad mutations from the gene pool by isolating them in individuals that perish quickly because they have an above-average number of bad mutations. However, the evidence suggests that the DMH's assumptions are shaky because many species have on average less than one harmful mutation per individual and no species that has been investigated shows evidence of synergy between harmful mutations.[149]

The random nature of recombination causes the relative abundance of alternative traits to vary from one generation to another. This genetic drift is insufficient on its own to make sexual reproduction advantageous, but a combination of genetic drift and natural selection may be sufficient. When chance produces combinations of good traits, natural selection gives a large advantage to lineages in which these traits become genetically linked. On the other hand, the benefits of good traits are neutralized if they appear along with bad traits. Sexual recombination gives good traits the opportunities to become linked with other good traits, and mathematical models suggest this may be more than enough to offset the disadvantages of sexual reproduction.[157] Other combinations of hypotheses that are inadequate on their own are also being examined.[149]

The adaptive function of sex remains a major unresolved issue in biology. The competing models to explain it were reviewed by John A. Birdsell and Christopher Wills.[161] The hypotheses discussed above all depend on the possible beneficial effects of random genetic variation produced by genetic recombination. An alternative view is that sex arose and is maintained as a process for repairing DNA damage, and that the genetic variation produced is an occasionally beneficial byproduct.[155][162]

Multicellularity edit

The simplest definitions of "multicellular", for example "having multiple cells", could include colonial cyanobacteria like Nostoc. Even a technical definition such as "having the same genome but different types of cell" would still include some genera of the green algae Volvox, which have cells that specialize in reproduction.[163] Multicellularity evolved independently in organisms as diverse as sponges and other animals, fungi, plants, brown algae, cyanobacteria, slime molds and myxobacteria.[15][164] For the sake of brevity, this article focuses on the organisms that show the greatest specialization of cells and variety of cell types, although this approach to the evolution of biological complexity could be regarded as "rather anthropocentric".[16]

 
A slime mold solves a maze. The mold (yellow) explored and filled the maze (left). When the researchers placed sugar (red) at two separate points, the mold concentrated most of its mass there and left only the most efficient connection between the two points (right).[165]

The initial advantages of multicellularity may have included: more efficient sharing of nutrients that are digested outside the cell,[166] increased resistance to predators, many of which attacked by engulfing; the ability to resist currents by attaching to a firm surface; the ability to reach upwards to filter-feed or to obtain sunlight for photosynthesis;[167] the ability to create an internal environment that gives protection against the external one;[16] and even the opportunity for a group of cells to behave "intelligently" by sharing information.[165] These features would also have provided opportunities for other organisms to diversify, by creating more varied environments than flat microbial mats could.[167]

Multicellularity with differentiated cells is beneficial to the organism as a whole but disadvantageous from the point of view of individual cells, most of which lose the opportunity to reproduce themselves. In an asexual multicellular organism, rogue cells which retain the ability to reproduce may take over and reduce the organism to a mass of undifferentiated cells. Sexual reproduction eliminates such rogue cells from the next generation and therefore appears to be a prerequisite for complex multicellularity.[167]

The available evidence indicates that eukaryotes evolved much earlier but remained inconspicuous until a rapid diversification around 1 Ga. The only respect in which eukaryotes clearly surpass bacteria and archaea is their capacity for variety of forms, and sexual reproduction enabled eukaryotes to exploit that advantage by producing organisms with multiple cells that differed in form and function.[167]

By comparing the composition of transcription factor families and regulatory network motifs between unicellular organisms and multicellular organisms, scientists found there are many novel transcription factor families and three novel types of regulatory network motifs in multicellular organisms, and novel family transcription factors are preferentially wired into these novel network motifs which are essential for multicullular development. These results propose a plausible mechanism for the contribution of novel-family transcription factors and novel network motifs to the origin of multicellular organisms at transcriptional regulatory level.[168]

Fossil evidence edit

The controversial Francevillian biota fossils, dated to 2.1 Ga, are the earliest known fossil organisms that are clearly multicellular, if they are indeed fossils.[40] They may have had differentiated cells.[169] Another early multicellular fossil, Qingshania, dated to 1.7 Ga, appears to consist of virtually identical cells. The red algae called Bangiomorpha, dated at 1.2 Ga, is the earliest known organism that certainly has differentiated, specialized cells, and is also the oldest known sexually reproducing organism.[167] The 1.43 billion-year-old fossils interpreted as fungi appear to have been multicellular with differentiated cells.[147] The "string of beads" organism Horodyskia, found in rocks dated from 1.5 Ga to 900 Ma, may have been an early metazoan;[15] however, it has also been interpreted as a colonial foraminiferan.[158]

Emergence of animals edit

A family tree of the animals[170]

Animals are multicellular eukaryotes,[note 1] and are distinguished from plants, algae, and fungi by lacking cell walls.[171] All animals are motile,[172] if only at certain life stages. All animals except sponges have bodies differentiated into separate tissues, including muscles, which move parts of the animal by contracting, and nerve tissue, which transmits and processes signals.[173] In November 2019, researchers reported the discovery of Caveasphaera, a multicellular organism found in 609-million-year-old rocks, that is not easily defined as an animal or non-animal, which may be related to one of the earliest instances of animal evolution.[174][175] Fossil studies of Caveasphaera have suggested that animal-like embryonic development arose much earlier than the oldest clearly defined animal fossils.[174] and may be consistent with studies suggesting that animal evolution may have begun about 750 million years ago.[175][176]

Nonetheless, the earliest widely accepted animal fossils are the rather modern-looking cnidarians (the group that includes jellyfish, sea anemones and Hydra), possibly from around 580 Ma, although fossils from the Doushantuo Formation can only be dated approximately. Their presence implies that the cnidarian and bilaterian lineages had already diverged.[177]

The Ediacara biota, which flourished for the last 40 million years before the start of the Cambrian,[178] were the first animals more than a very few centimetres long. Many were flat and had a "quilted" appearance, and seemed so strange that there was a proposal to classify them as a separate kingdom, Vendozoa.[179] Others, however, have been interpreted as early molluscs (Kimberella[180][181]), echinoderms (Arkarua[182]), and arthropods (Spriggina,[183] Parvancorina[184]). There is still debate about the classification of these specimens, mainly because the diagnostic features which allow taxonomists to classify more recent organisms, such as similarities to living organisms, are generally absent in the Ediacarans. However, there seems little doubt that Kimberella was at least a triploblastic bilaterian animal, in other words, an animal significantly more complex than the cnidarians.[185]

The small shelly fauna are a very mixed collection of fossils found between the Late Ediacaran and Middle Cambrian periods. The earliest, Cloudina, shows signs of successful defense against predation and may indicate the start of an evolutionary arms race. Some tiny Early Cambrian shells almost certainly belonged to molluscs, while the owners of some "armor plates", Halkieria and Microdictyon, were eventually identified when more complete specimens were found in Cambrian lagerstätten that preserved soft-bodied animals.[186]

 
Opabinia made the largest single contribution to modern interest in the Cambrian explosion.[187]

In the 1970s there was already a debate about whether the emergence of the modern phyla was "explosive" or gradual but hidden by the shortage of Precambrian animal fossils.[186] A re-analysis of fossils from the Burgess Shale lagerstätte increased interest in the issue when it revealed animals, such as Opabinia, which did not fit into any known phylum. At the time these were interpreted as evidence that the modern phyla had evolved very rapidly in the Cambrian explosion and that the Burgess Shale's "weird wonders" showed that the Early Cambrian was a uniquely experimental period of animal evolution.[188] Later discoveries of similar animals and the development of new theoretical approaches led to the conclusion that many of the "weird wonders" were evolutionary "aunts" or "cousins" of modern groups[189]—for example that Opabinia was a member of the lobopods, a group which includes the ancestors of the arthropods, and that it may have been closely related to the modern tardigrades.[190] Nevertheless, there is still much debate about whether the Cambrian explosion was really explosive and, if so, how and why it happened and why it appears unique in the history of animals.[191]

Deuterostomes and the first vertebrates edit

 
Acanthodians were among the earliest vertebrates with jaws.[192]

Most of the animals at the heart of the Cambrian explosion debate were protostomes, one of the two main groups of complex animals. The other major group, the deuterostomes, contains invertebrates such as starfish and sea urchins (echinoderms), as well as chordates (see below). Many echinoderms have hard calcite "shells", which are fairly common from the Early Cambrian small shelly fauna onwards.[186] Other deuterostome groups are soft-bodied, and most of the significant Cambrian deuterostome fossils come from the Chengjiang fauna, a lagerstätte in China.[193] The chordates are another major deuterostome group: animals with a distinct dorsal nerve cord. Chordates include soft-bodied invertebrates such as tunicates as well as vertebrates—animals with a backbone. While tunicate fossils predate the Cambrian explosion,[194] the Chengjiang fossils Haikouichthys and Myllokunmingia appear to be true vertebrates,[24] and Haikouichthys had distinct vertebrae, which may have been slightly mineralized.[195] Vertebrates with jaws, such as the acanthodians, first appeared in the Late Ordovician.[196]

Colonization of land edit

Adaptation to life on land is a major challenge: all land organisms need to avoid drying-out and all those above microscopic size must create special structures to withstand gravity; respiration and gas exchange systems have to change; reproductive systems cannot depend on water to carry eggs and sperm towards each other.[197][198][199] Although the earliest good evidence of land plants and animals dates back to the Ordovician period (488 to 444 Ma), and a number of microorganism lineages made it onto land much earlier,[200][201] modern land ecosystems only appeared in the Late Devonian, about 385 to 359 Ma.[202] In May 2017, evidence of the earliest known life on land may have been found in 3.48-billion-year-old geyserite and other related mineral deposits (often found around hot springs and geysers) uncovered in the Pilbara Craton of Western Australia.[203][204] In July 2018, scientists reported that the earliest life on land may have been bacteria living on land 3.22 billion years ago.[205] In May 2019, scientists reported the discovery of a fossilized fungus, named Ourasphaira giraldae, in the Canadian Arctic, that may have grown on land a billion years ago, well before plants were living on land.[206][207][208]

Evolution of terrestrial antioxidants edit

Oxygen began to accumulate in Earth's atmosphere over 3 Ga, as a by-product of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria (blue-green algae). However, oxygen produces destructive chemical oxidation which was toxic to most previous organisms. Protective endogenous antioxidant enzymes and exogenous dietary antioxidants helped to prevent oxidative damage. For example, brown algae accumulate inorganic mineral antioxidants such as rubidium, vanadium, zinc, iron, copper, molybdenum, selenium and iodine, concentrated more than 30,000 times more than in seawater. Most marine mineral antioxidants act in the cells as essential trace elements in redox and antioxidant metalloenzymes.[citation needed]

When plants and animals began to enter rivers and land about 500 Ma, environmental deficiency of these marine mineral antioxidants was a challenge to the evolution of terrestrial life.[209][210] Terrestrial plants slowly optimized the production of new endogenous antioxidants such as ascorbic acid, polyphenols, flavonoids, tocopherols, etc.

A few of these appeared more recently, in last 200–50 Ma, in fruits and flowers of angiosperm plants.[citation needed] In fact, angiosperms (the dominant type of plant today) and most of their antioxidant pigments evolved during the Late Jurassic period. Plants employ antioxidants to defend their structures against reactive oxygen species produced during photosynthesis. Animals are exposed to the same oxidants, and they have evolved endogenous enzymatic antioxidant systems.[211] Iodine in the form of the iodide ion I is the most primitive and abundant electron-rich essential element in the diet of marine and terrestrial organisms; it acts as an electron donor and has this ancestral antioxidant function in all iodide-concentrating cells, from primitive marine algae to terrestrial vertebrates.[212]

Evolution of soil edit

Before the colonization of land there was no soil, a combination of mineral particles and decomposed organic matter. Land surfaces were either bare rock or shifting sand produced by weathering. Water and dissolved nutrients would have drained away very quickly.[202] In the Sub-Cambrian peneplain in Sweden, for example, maximum depth of kaolinitization by Neoproterozoic weathering is about 5 m, while nearby kaolin deposits developed in the Mesozoic are much thicker.[213] It has been argued that in the late Neoproterozoic sheet wash was a dominant process of erosion of surface material due to the lack of plants on land.[214]

 
Lichens growing on concrete

Films of cyanobacteria, which are not plants but use the same photosynthesis mechanisms, have been found in modern deserts in areas unsuitable for vascular plants. This suggests that microbial mats may have been the first organisms to colonize dry land, possibly in the Precambrian. Mat-forming cyanobacteria could have gradually evolved resistance to desiccation as they spread from the seas to intertidal zones and then to land.[202] Lichens, which are symbiotic combinations of a fungus (almost always an ascomycete) and one or more photosynthesizers (green algae or cyanobacteria),[215] are also important colonizers of lifeless environments,[202] and their ability to break down rocks contributes to soil formation where plants cannot survive.[215] The earliest known ascomycete fossils date from 423 to 419 Ma in the Silurian.[202]

Soil formation would have been very slow until the appearance of burrowing animals, which mix the mineral and organic components of soil and whose feces are a major source of organic components.[202] Burrows have been found in Ordovician sediments, and are attributed to annelids (worms) or arthropods.[202][216]

Plants and the Late Devonian wood crisis edit

 
Reconstruction of Cooksonia, a vascular plant from the Silurian
 
Fossilized trees from the Middle Devonian Gilboa Fossil Forest

In aquatic algae, almost all cells are capable of photosynthesis and are nearly independent. Life on land requires plants to become internally more complex and specialized: photosynthesis is most efficient at the top; roots extract water and nutrients from the ground; and the intermediate parts support and transport.[197][217]

Spores of land plants resembling liverworts have been found in Middle Ordovician rocks from 476 Ma. Middle Silurian rocks from 430 Ma contain fossils of true plants, including clubmosses such as Baragwanathia; most were under 10 centimetres (3.9 in) high, and some appear closely related to vascular plants, the group that includes trees.[217]

By the Late Devonian 370 Ma, abundant trees such as Archaeopteris bound the soil so firmly that they changed river systems from mostly braided to mostly meandering.[218] This caused the "Late Devonian wood crisis" because:[219]

  • They removed more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, reducing the greenhouse effect and thus causing an ice age in the Carboniferous period.[21] This did not repeat in later ecosystems, since the carbon dioxide "locked up" in wood was returned to the atmosphere by decomposition of dead wood, but the earliest fossil evidence of fungi that can decompose wood also comes from the Late Devonian.[220]
  • The increasing depth of plants' roots led to more washing of nutrients into rivers and seas by rain. This caused algal blooms whose high consumption of oxygen caused anoxic events in deeper waters, increasing the extinction rate among deep-water animals.[21]

Land invertebrates edit

Animals had to change their feeding and excretory systems, and most land animals developed internal fertilization of their eggs.[199] The difference in refractive index between water and air required changes in their eyes. On the other hand, in some ways movement and breathing became easier, and the better transmission of high-frequency sounds in the air encouraged the development of hearing.[198]

The oldest animal with evidence of air-breathing, although not being the oldest myriapod fossil record, is Pneumodesmus, an archipolypodan millipede from the Early Devonian, about 414 Ma.[221] Its air-breathing, terrestrial nature is evidenced by the presence of spiracles, the openings to tracheal systems.[222] However, some earlier trace fossils from the Cambrian-Ordovician boundary about 490 Ma are interpreted as the tracks of large amphibious arthropods on coastal sand dunes, and may have been made by euthycarcinoids,[223] which are thought to be evolutionary "aunts" of myriapods.[224] Other trace fossils from the Late Ordovician a little over 445 Ma probably represent land invertebrates, and there is clear evidence of numerous arthropods on coasts and alluvial plains shortly before the Silurian-Devonian boundary, about 415 Ma, including signs that some arthropods ate plants.[225] Arthropods were well pre-adapted to colonise land, because their existing jointed exoskeletons provided protection against desiccation, support against gravity and a means of locomotion that was not dependent on water.[199][226]

The fossil record of other major invertebrate groups on land is poor: none at all for non-parasitic flatworms, nematodes or nemerteans; some parasitic nematodes have been fossilized in amber; annelid worm fossils are known from the Carboniferous, but they may still have been aquatic animals; the earliest fossils of gastropods on land date from the Late Carboniferous, and this group may have had to wait until leaf litter became abundant enough to provide the moist conditions they need.[198]

The earliest confirmed fossils of flying insects date from the Late Carboniferous, but it is thought that insects developed the ability to fly in the Early Carboniferous or even Late Devonian. This gave them a wider range of ecological niches for feeding and breeding, and a means of escape from predators and from unfavorable changes in the environment.[227] About 99% of modern insect species fly or are descendants of flying species.[228]

Amphibians edit

 
Acanthostega changed views about the early evolution of tetrapods.[229]

Tetrapods, vertebrates with four limbs, evolved from other rhipidistian fish over a relatively short timespan during the Late Devonian (370 to 360 Ma).[231] The early groups are grouped together as Labyrinthodontia. They retained aquatic, fry-like tadpoles, a system still seen in modern amphibians.

Iodine and T4/T3 stimulate the amphibian metamorphosis and the evolution of nervous systems transforming the aquatic, vegetarian tadpole into a "more evolved" terrestrial, carnivorous frog with better neurological, visuospatial, olfactory and cognitive abilities for hunting.[209] The new hormonal action of T3 was made possible by the formation of T3-receptors in the cells of vertebrates. First, about 600–500 million years ago, the alpha T3-receptors with a metamorphosing action appeared in primitive chordates and then, about 250–150 million years ago, the beta T3-receptors with metabolic and thermogenetic actions appeared in birds and mammals.[232]

From the 1950s to the early 1980s it was thought that tetrapods evolved from fish that had already acquired the ability to crawl on land, possibly in order to go from a pool that was drying out to one that was deeper. However, in 1987, nearly complete fossils of Acanthostega from about 363 Ma showed that this Late Devonian transitional animal had legs and both lungs and gills, but could never have survived on land: its limbs and its wrist and ankle joints were too weak to bear its weight; its ribs were too short to prevent its lungs from being squeezed flat by its weight; its fish-like tail fin would have been damaged by dragging on the ground. The current hypothesis is that Acanthostega, which was about 1 metre (3.3 ft) long, was a wholly aquatic predator that hunted in shallow water. Its skeleton differed from that of most fish, in ways that enabled it to raise its head to breathe air while its body remained submerged, including: its jaws show modifications that would have enabled it to gulp air; the bones at the back of its skull are locked together, providing strong attachment points for muscles that raised its head; the head is not joined to the shoulder girdle and it has a distinct neck.[229]

The Devonian proliferation of land plants may help to explain why air breathing would have been an advantage: leaves falling into streams and rivers would have encouraged the growth of aquatic vegetation; this would have attracted grazing invertebrates and small fish that preyed on them; they would have been attractive prey but the environment was unsuitable for the big marine predatory fish; air-breathing would have been necessary because these waters would have been short of oxygen, since warm water holds less dissolved oxygen than cooler marine water and since the decomposition of vegetation would have used some of the oxygen.[229]

Later discoveries revealed earlier transitional forms between Acanthostega and completely fish-like animals.[233] Unfortunately, there is then a gap (Romer's gap) of about 30 Ma between the fossils of ancestral tetrapods and Middle Carboniferous fossils of vertebrates that look well-adapted for life on land, during which only some fossils are found, which had five digits in the terminating point of the four limbs, showing true or crown tetrapods appeared in the gap around 350 Ma. Some of the fossils after this gap look as if the animals which they belonged to were early relatives of modern amphibians, all of which need to keep their skins moist and to lay their eggs in water, while others are accepted as early relatives of the amniotes, whose waterproof skin and egg membranes enable them to live and breed far from water.[230] The Carboniferous Rainforest Collapse may have paved the way for amniotes to become dominant over amphibians.

Reptiles edit

Amniotes
Synapsids

Early synapsids (extinct)

Pelycosaurs

Extinct pelycosaurs

Therapsids

Extinct therapsids

Mammaliaformes
   

Extinct mammaliaforms

   

Mammals

Sauropsids

Anapsids; whether turtles belong here is debated[234]

   

Captorhinidae and Protorothyrididae (extinct)

Diapsids

Araeoscelidia (extinct)

   
   

Squamata (lizards and snakes)

Archosaurs

Extinct archosaurs

Crocodilians

   

Pterosaurs (extinct)

Dinosaurs
Theropods
   

Extinct
theropods

   

Birds

Sauropods
(extinct)

   

Ornithischians (extinct)

Possible family tree of dinosaurs, birds and mammals[235][236]

Amniotes, whose eggs can survive in dry environments, probably evolved in the Late Carboniferous period (330 to 298.9 Ma). The earliest fossils of the two surviving amniote groups, synapsids and sauropsids, date from around 313 Ma.[235][236] The synapsid pelycosaurs and their descendants the therapsids are the most common land vertebrates in the best-known Permian (298.9 to 251.9 Ma) fossil beds. However, at the time these were all in temperate zones at middle latitudes, and there is evidence that hotter, drier environments nearer the Equator were dominated by sauropsids and amphibians.[237]

The Permian–Triassic extinction event wiped out almost all land vertebrates,[238] as well as the great majority of other life.[239] During the slow recovery from this catastrophe, estimated to have taken 30 million years,[240] a previously obscure sauropsid group became the most abundant and diverse terrestrial vertebrates: a few fossils of archosauriformes ("ruling lizard forms") have been found in Late Permian rocks,[241] but, by the Middle Triassic, archosaurs were the dominant land vertebrates. Dinosaurs distinguished themselves from other archosaurs in the Late Triassic, and became the dominant land vertebrates of the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods (201.4 to 66 Ma).[242]

Birds edit

During the Late Jurassic, birds evolved from small, predatory theropod dinosaurs.[243] The first birds inherited teeth and long, bony tails from their dinosaur ancestors,[243] but some had developed horny, toothless beaks by the very Late Jurassic[244] and short pygostyle tails by the Early Cretaceous.[245]

Mammals edit

While the archosaurs and dinosaurs were becoming more dominant in the Triassic, the mammaliaform successors of the therapsids evolved into small, mainly nocturnal insectivores. This ecological role may have promoted the evolution of mammals, for example nocturnal life may have accelerated the development of endothermy ("warm-bloodedness") and hair or fur.[246] By 195 Ma in the Early Jurassic there were animals that were very like today's mammals in a number of respects.[247] Unfortunately, there is a gap in the fossil record throughout the Middle Jurassic.[248] However, fossil teeth discovered in Madagascar indicate that the split between the lineage leading to monotremes and the one leading to other living mammals had occurred by 167 Ma.[249] After dominating land vertebrate niches for about 150 Ma, the non-avian dinosaurs perished in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event (66 Ma) along with many other groups of organisms.[250] Mammals throughout the time of the dinosaurs had been restricted to a narrow range of taxa, sizes and shapes, but increased rapidly in size and diversity after the extinction,[251][252] with bats taking to the air within 13 million years,[253] and cetaceans to the sea within 15 million years.[254]

Flowering plants edit

Gymnosperms

Gnetales
(gymnosperm)

Welwitschia
(gymnosperm)

Ephedra
(gymnosperm)

Bennettitales

Angiosperms
(flowering plants)

One possible family tree of flowering plants[255]
Gymnosperms

Angiosperms
(flowering plants)

Gnetales
(gymnosperm)

Conifers
(gymnosperm)

Another possible family tree[256]

The first flowering plants appeared around 130 Ma.[257] The 250,000 to 400,000 species of flowering plants outnumber all other ground plants combined, and are the dominant vegetation in most terrestrial ecosystems. There is fossil evidence that flowering plants diversified rapidly in the Early Cretaceous, from 130 to 90 Ma,[255][256] and that their rise was associated with that of pollinating insects.[256] Among modern flowering plants Magnolia are thought to be close to the common ancestor of the group.[255] However, paleontologists have not succeeded in identifying the earliest stages in the evolution of flowering plants.[255][256]

Social insects edit

 
These termite mounds have survived a bush fire.

The social insects are remarkable because the great majority of individuals in each colony are sterile. This appears contrary to basic concepts of evolution such as natural selection and the selfish gene. In fact, there are very few eusocial insect species: only 15 out of approximately 2,600 living families of insects contain eusocial species, and it seems that eusociality has evolved independently only 12 times among arthropods, although some eusocial lineages have diversified into several families. Nevertheless, social insects have been spectacularly successful; for example although ants and termites account for only about 2% of known insect species, they form over 50% of the total mass of insects. Their ability to control a territory appears to be the foundation of their success.[258]

The sacrifice of breeding opportunities by most individuals has long been explained as a consequence of these species' unusual haplodiploid method of sex determination, which has the paradoxical consequence that two sterile worker daughters of the same queen share more genes with each other than they would with their offspring if they could breed.[259] However, E. O. Wilson and Bert Hölldobler argue that this explanation is faulty: for example, it is based on kin selection, but there is no evidence of nepotism in colonies that have multiple queens. Instead, they write, eusociality evolves only in species that are under strong pressure from predators and competitors, but in environments where it is possible to build "fortresses"; after colonies have established this security, they gain other advantages through co-operative foraging. In support of this explanation they cite the appearance of eusociality in bathyergid mole rats,[258] which are not haplodiploid.[260]

The earliest fossils of insects have been found in Early Devonian rocks from about 400 Ma, which preserve only a few varieties of flightless insect. The Mazon Creek lagerstätten from the Late Carboniferous, about 300 Ma, include about 200 species, some gigantic by modern standards, and indicate that insects had occupied their main modern ecological niches as herbivores, detritivores and insectivores. Social termites and ants first appeared in the Early Cretaceous, and advanced social bees have been found in Late Cretaceous rocks but did not become abundant until the Middle Cenozoic.[261]

Humans edit

The idea that, along with other life forms, modern-day humans evolved from an ancient, common ancestor was proposed by Robert Chambers in 1844 and taken up by Charles Darwin in 1871.[262] Modern humans evolved from a lineage of upright-walking apes that has been traced back over 6 Ma to Sahelanthropus.[263] The first known stone tools were made about 2.5 Ma, apparently by Australopithecus garhi, and were found near animal bones that bear scratches made by these tools.[264] The earliest hominines had chimpanzee-sized brains, but there has been a fourfold increase in the last 3 Ma; a statistical analysis suggests that hominine brain sizes depend almost completely on the date of the fossils, while the species to which they are assigned has only slight influence.[265] There is a long-running debate about whether modern humans evolved all over the world simultaneously from existing advanced hominines or are descendants of a single small population in Africa, which then migrated all over the world less than 200,000 years ago and replaced previous hominine species.[266] There is also debate about whether anatomically modern humans had an intellectual, cultural and technological "Great Leap Forward" under 100,000 years ago and, if so, whether this was due to neurological changes that are not visible in fossils.[267]

Mass extinctions edit

 CambrianOrdovicianSilurianDevonianCarboniferousPermianTriassicJurassicCretaceousPaleogeneNeogene
Marine extinction intensity during Phanerozoic
%
Millions of years ago
 CambrianOrdovicianSilurianDevonianCarboniferousPermianTriassicJurassicCretaceousPaleogeneNeogene
Apparent extinction intensity, i.e. the fraction of genera going extinct at any given time, as reconstructed from the fossil record. (Graph not meant to include the recent, ongoing Holocene extinction event).

Life on Earth has suffered occasional mass extinctions at least since 542 Ma. Although they were disasters at the time, mass extinctions have sometimes accelerated the evolution of life on Earth. When dominance of particular ecological niches passes from one group of organisms to another, it is rarely because the new dominant group is "superior" to the old and usually because an extinction event eliminates the old dominant group and makes way for the new one.[31][268]

 
All genera
"Well-defined" genera
Trend line
"Big Five" mass extinctions
Other mass extinctions
Million years ago
Thousands of genera
 
Phanerozoic biodiversity as shown by the fossil record

The fossil record appears to show that the gaps between mass extinctions are becoming longer and that the average and background rates of extinction are decreasing. Both of these phenomena could be explained in one or more ways:[269]

  • The oceans may have become more hospitable to life over the last 500 Ma and less vulnerable to mass extinctions: dissolved oxygen became more widespread and penetrated to greater depths; the development of life on land reduced the run-off of nutrients and hence the risk of eutrophication and anoxic events; and marine ecosystems became more diversified so that food chains were less likely to be disrupted.[270][271]
  • Reasonably complete fossils are very rare, most extinct organisms are represented only by partial fossils, and complete fossils are rarest in the oldest rocks. So paleontologists have mistakenly assigned parts of the same organism to different genera, which were often defined solely to accommodate these finds—the story of Anomalocaris is an example of this. The risk of this mistake is higher for older fossils because these are often both unlike parts of any living organism and poorly conserved. Many of the "superfluous" genera are represented by fragments which are not found again and the "superfluous" genera appear to become extinct very quickly.[269]

Biodiversity in the fossil record, which is "...the number of distinct genera alive at any given time; that is, those whose first occurrence predates and whose last occurrence postdates that time"[272] shows a different trend: a fairly swift rise from 542 to 400 Ma; a slight decline from 400 to 200 Ma, in which the devastating Permian–Triassic extinction event is an important factor; and a swift rise from 200 Ma to the present.[272]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Myxozoa were thought to be an exception, but are now thought to be heavily modified members of the Cnidaria. Jímenez-Guri, Eva; Philippe, Hervé; Okamura, Beth; et al. (July 6, 2007). "Buddenbrockia Is a Cnidarian Worm". Science. 317 (5834): 116–118. Bibcode:2007Sci...317..116J. doi:10.1126/science.1142024. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17615357. S2CID 5170702.

References edit

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  2. ^ a b Rosing, Minik T. (January 29, 1999). "13C-Depleted Carbon Microparticles in >3700-Ma Sea-Floor Sedimentary Rocks from West Greenland". Science. 283 (5402): 674–676. Bibcode:1999Sci...283..674R. doi:10.1126/science.283.5402.674. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 9924024.
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history, life, history, evolution, redirects, here, confused, with, history, evolutionary, thought, prehistoric, life, redirects, here, book, prehistoric, life, book, chronological, guide, timeline, evolutionary, history, life, history, life, earth, traces, pr. History of evolution redirects here Not to be confused with History of evolutionary thought Prehistoric life redirects here For the book see Prehistoric Life book For a chronological guide see Timeline of the evolutionary history of life The history of life on Earth traces the processes by which living and fossil organisms evolved from the earliest emergence of life to present day Earth formed about 4 5 billion years ago abbreviated as Ga for gigaannum and evidence suggests that life emerged prior to 3 7 Ga 1 2 3 The similarities among all known present day species indicate that they have diverged through the process of evolution from a common ancestor 4 The earliest clear evidence of life comes from biogenic carbon signatures 2 3 and stromatolite fossils 5 discovered in 3 7 billion year old metasedimentary rocks from western Greenland In 2015 possible remains of biotic life were found in 4 1 billion year old rocks in Western Australia 6 7 There is further evidence of possibly the oldest forms of life in the form of fossilized microorganisms in hydrothermal vent precipitates from the Nuvvuagittuq Belt that may have lived as early as 4 28 billion years ago not long after the oceans formed 4 4 billion years ago and after the Earth formed 4 54 billion years ago 8 9 These earliest fossils however may have originated from non biological processes 1 10 7 11 Microbial mats of coexisting bacteria and archaea were the dominant form of life in the early Archean eon and many of the major steps in early evolution are thought to have taken place in this environment 12 The evolution of photosynthesis by cyanobacteria around 3 5 Ga eventually led to a buildup of its waste product oxygen in the oceans After free oxygen saturated all available reductant substances on the Earth s surface it built up in the atmosphere leading to the Great Oxygenation Event around 2 4 Ga 13 The earliest evidence of eukaryotes complex cells with organelles dates from 1 85 Ga 14 15 likely due to symbiogenesis between anaerobic archaea and aerobic proteobacteria in co adaptation against the new oxidative stress While eukaryotes may have been present earlier their diversification accelerated when aerobic cellular respiration by the endosymbiont mitochondria provided a more abundant source of biological energy Around 1 6 Ga some eukaryotes gained the ability to photosynthesize via endosymbiosis with cyanobacteria and gave rise to various algae that eventually overtook cyanobacteria as the dominant primary producers At around 1 7 Ga multicellular organisms began to appear with differentiated cells performing specialised functions 16 While early organisms reproduced asexually the primary method of reproduction for the vast majority of macroscopic organisms including almost all eukaryotes which includes animals and plants is sexual reproduction the fusion of male and female reproductive cells gametes to create a zygote 17 The origin and evolution of sexual reproduction remain a puzzle for biologists though it is thought to have evolved from a single celled eukaryotic ancestor 18 While microorganisms formed the earliest terrestrial ecosystems at least 2 7 Ga the evolution of plants from freshwater green algae dates back to about 1 billion years ago 19 20 Microorganisms are thought to have paved the way for the inception of land plants in the Ordovician period Land plants were so successful that they are thought to have contributed to the Late Devonian extinction event 21 as early tree archaeopteris drew down CO2 levels leading to global cooling and lowered sea levels while their roots increased rock weathering and nutrient run offs which may have triggered algal bloom anoxic events Bilateria animals having a left and a right side that are mirror images of each other appeared by 555 Ma million years ago 22 Ediacara biota appeared during the Ediacaran period 23 while vertebrates along with most other modern phyla originated about 525 Ma during the Cambrian explosion 24 During the Permian period synapsids including the ancestors of mammals dominated the land 25 The Permian Triassic extinction event killed most complex species of its time 252 Ma 26 During the recovery from this catastrophe archosaurs became the most abundant land vertebrates 27 one archosaur group the dinosaurs dominated the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods 28 After the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event 66 Ma killed off the non avian dinosaurs 29 mammals increased rapidly in size and diversity 30 Such mass extinctions may have accelerated evolution by providing opportunities for new groups of organisms to diversify 31 Only a very small percentage of species have been identified one estimate claims that Earth may have 1 trillion species because identifying every microbial species on Earth presents a huge challenge 32 33 Only 1 75 1 8 million species have been named 34 35 and 1 8 million documented in a central database 36 The currently living species represent less than one percent of all species that have ever lived on Earth 37 38 Contents 1 Earliest history of Earth 2 Earliest evidence for life on Earth 3 Origins of life on Earth 3 1 Independent emergence on Earth 3 1 1 Replication first RNA world 3 1 2 Membranes first Lipid world 3 1 3 The clay hypothesis 3 1 4 Metabolism first Iron sulfur world 3 1 5 Metabolism first Pre cells successive cellularisation 3 2 Prebiotic environments 3 2 1 Geothermal springs 3 2 2 Deep sea hydrothermal vents 3 2 2 1 Life seeded from elsewhere 3 2 2 2 Carbonate rich lakes 4 Environmental and evolutionary impact of microbial mats 5 Diversification of eukaryotes 5 1 Chromatin nucleus endomembrane system and mitochondria 5 2 Plastids 6 Sexual reproduction and multicellular organisms 6 1 Evolution of sexual reproduction 6 2 Multicellularity 6 3 Fossil evidence 7 Emergence of animals 7 1 Deuterostomes and the first vertebrates 8 Colonization of land 8 1 Evolution of terrestrial antioxidants 8 2 Evolution of soil 8 3 Plants and the Late Devonian wood crisis 8 4 Land invertebrates 8 5 Amphibians 8 6 Reptiles 8 7 Birds 8 8 Mammals 8 9 Flowering plants 8 10 Social insects 8 11 Humans 9 Mass extinctions 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarliest history of Earth editHistory of Earth and its life 4500 4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 HadeanArcheanProtero zoicPhanero zoicEoPaleoMesoNeoPaleoMesoNeoPaleoMesoCeno Earth and Solar System formed Cool surface oceans atmosphere Late Heavy Bombardment Earliest evidence of life 4100 Oxygenation of atmosphere Earliest indisputable multicellular organism 39 40 41 42 Cambrian explosion Earliest land invertebrates and plants Earliest land vertebrates Earliest known dinosaur Extinction of non avian dinosaursScale Ma Millions of years Main article History of Earth The oldest meteorite fragments found on Earth are about 4 54 billion years old this coupled primarily with the dating of ancient lead deposits has put the estimated age of Earth at around that time 43 The Moon has the same composition as Earth s crust but does not contain an iron rich core like the Earth s Many scientists think that about 40 million years after the formation of Earth it collided with a body the size of Mars throwing crust material into the orbit that formed the Moon Another hypothesis is that the Earth and Moon started to coalesce at the same time but the Earth having a much stronger gravity than the early Moon attracted almost all the iron particles in the area 44 Until 2001 the oldest rocks found on Earth were about 3 8 billion years old 45 43 leading scientists to estimate that the Earth s surface had been molten until then Accordingly they named this part of Earth s history the Hadean 46 However analysis of zircons formed 4 4 Ga indicates that Earth s crust solidified about 100 million years after the planet s formation and that the planet quickly acquired oceans and an atmosphere which may have been capable of supporting life 47 48 49 Evidence from the Moon indicates that from 4 to 3 8 Ga it suffered a Late Heavy Bombardment by debris that was left over from the formation of the Solar System and the Earth should have experienced an even heavier bombardment due to its stronger gravity 46 50 While there is no direct evidence of conditions on Earth 4 to 3 8 Ga there is no reason to think that the Earth was not also affected by this late heavy bombardment 51 This event may well have stripped away any previous atmosphere and oceans in this case gases and water from comet impacts may have contributed to their replacement although outgassing from volcanoes on Earth would have supplied at least half 52 However if subsurface microbial life had evolved by this point it would have survived the bombardment 53 Earliest evidence for life on Earth editMain article Earliest known life forms The earliest identified organisms were minute and relatively featureless and their fossils looked like small rods that are very difficult to tell apart from structures that arise through abiotic physical processes The oldest undisputed evidence of life on Earth interpreted as fossilized bacteria dates to 3 Ga 54 Other finds in rocks dated to about 3 5 Ga have been interpreted as bacteria 55 with geochemical evidence also seeming to show the presence of life 3 8 Ga 56 However these analyses were closely scrutinized and non biological processes were found which could produce all of the signatures of life that had been reported 57 58 While this does not prove that the structures found had a non biological origin they cannot be taken as clear evidence for the presence of life Geochemical signatures from rocks deposited 3 4 Ga have been interpreted as evidence for life 54 59 although these statements have not been thoroughly examined by critics Evidence for fossilized microorganisms considered to be 3 77 billion to 4 28 billion years old was found in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt in Quebec Canada 8 although the evidence is disputed as inconclusive 60 Origins of life on Earth edit nbsp Evolutionary tree showing the divergence of modern species from their common ancestor in the center 61 The three domains are colored with bacteria blue archaea green and eukaryotes red Further information Evidence of common descent Common descent and Homology biology Some biologists reason that all living organisms on Earth must share a single last universal ancestor because it would be virtually impossible that two or more separate lineages could have independently developed the many complex biochemical mechanisms common to all living organisms 62 63 According to a different scenario 64 65 66 a single last universal ancestor e g a first cell or a first individual precursor cell has never existed Instead the early biochemical evolution of life 67 led to diversification through the development of a multiphenotypical population of pre cells from which the precursor cells protocells of the three domains of life 68 emerged Thus the formation of cells was a successive process See Metabolism first Pre cells successive cellularisation below Independent emergence on Earth edit Main article Abiogenesis Life on Earth is based on carbon and water Carbon provides stable frameworks for complex chemicals and can be easily extracted from the environment especially from carbon dioxide 49 There is no other chemical element whose properties are similar enough to carbon s to be called an analogue silicon the element directly below carbon on the periodic table does not form very many complex stable molecules and because most of its compounds are water insoluble and because silicon dioxide is a hard and abrasive solid in contrast to carbon dioxide at temperatures associated with living things it would be more difficult for organisms to extract The elements boron and phosphorus have more complex chemistries but suffer from other limitations relative to carbon Water is an excellent solvent and has two other useful properties the fact that ice floats enables aquatic organisms to survive beneath it in winter and its molecules have electrically negative and positive ends which enables it to form a wider range of compounds than other solvents can Other good solvents such as ammonia are liquid only at such low temperatures that chemical reactions may be too slow to sustain life and lack water s other advantages 69 Organisms based on alternative biochemistry may however be possible on other planets 70 Research on how life might have emerged from non living chemicals focuses on three possible starting points self replication an organism s ability to produce offspring that are very similar to itself metabolism its ability to feed and repair itself and external cell membranes which allow food to enter and waste products to leave but exclude unwanted substances 71 Research on abiogenesis still has a long way to go since theoretical and empirical approaches are only beginning to make contact with each other 72 73 Replication first RNA world edit Main articles Last universal common ancestor and RNA world Even the simplest members of the three modern domains of life use DNA to record their recipes and a complex array of RNA and protein molecules to read these instructions and use them for growth maintenance and self replication The discovery that some RNA molecules can catalyze both their own replication and the construction of proteins led to the hypothesis of earlier life forms based entirely on RNA 74 These ribozymes could have formed an RNA world in which there were individuals but no species as mutations and horizontal gene transfers would have meant that offspring were likely to have different genomes from their parents and evolution occurred at the level of genes rather than organisms 75 RNA would later have been replaced by DNA which can build longer more stable genomes strengthening heritability and expanding the capabilities of individual organisms 75 76 77 Ribozymes remain as the main components of ribosomes the protein factories in modern cells 78 Evidence suggests the first RNA molecules formed on Earth prior to 4 17 Ga 79 Although short self replicating RNA molecules have been artificially produced in laboratories 80 doubts have been raised about whether natural non biological synthesis of RNA is possible 81 The earliest ribozymes may have been formed of simpler nucleic acids such as PNA TNA or GNA which would have been replaced later by RNA 82 83 In 2003 it was proposed that porous metal sulfide precipitates would assist RNA synthesis at about 100 C 212 F and ocean bottom pressures near hydrothermal vents Under this hypothesis lipid membranes would be the last major cell components to appear and until then the protocells would be confined to the pores 84 Membranes first Lipid world edit nbsp water attracting heads of lipid molecules water repellent tails nbsp Cross section through a liposome It has been suggested that double walled bubbles of lipids like those that form the external membranes of cells may have been an essential first step 85 Experiments that simulated the conditions of the early Earth have reported the formation of lipids and these can spontaneously form liposomes double walled bubbles and then reproduce themselves 49 Although they are not intrinsically information carriers as nucleic acids are they would be subject to natural selection for longevity and reproduction Nucleic acids such as RNA might then have formed more easily within the liposomes than outside 86 The clay hypothesis edit Main articles Graham Cairns Smith Clay hypothesis and RNA world RNA is complex and there are doubts about whether it can be produced non biologically in the wild 81 Some clays notably montmorillonite have properties that make them plausible accelerators for the emergence of an RNA world they grow by self replication of their crystalline pattern they are subject to an analogue of natural selection as the clay species that grows fastest in a particular environment rapidly becomes dominant and they can catalyze the formation of RNA molecules 87 Although this idea has not become the scientific consensus it still has active supporters 88 Research in 2003 reported that montmorillonite could also accelerate the conversion of fatty acids into bubbles and that the bubbles could encapsulate RNA attached to the clay These bubbles can then grow by absorbing additional lipids and then divide The formation of the earliest cells may have been aided by similar processes 89 A similar hypothesis presents self replicating iron rich clays as the progenitors of nucleotides lipids and amino acids 90 Metabolism first Iron sulfur world edit Main article Iron sulfur world hypothesisA series of experiments starting in 1997 showed that early stages in the formation of proteins from inorganic materials including carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide could be achieved by using iron sulfide and nickel sulfide as catalysts Most of the steps required temperatures of about 100 C 212 F and moderate pressures although one stage required 250 C 482 F and a pressure equivalent to that found under 7 kilometres 4 3 mi of rock Hence it was suggested that self sustaining synthesis of proteins could have occurred near hydrothermal vents 67 Metabolism first Pre cells successive cellularisation edit In this scenario the biochemical evolution of life 67 led to diversification through the development of a multiphenotypical population of pre cells 64 65 66 i e evolving entities of primordial life with different characteristics and wide spread horizontal gene transfer nbsp Early diversification of life with Kandler s pre cell theory Kandler 1998 p 22 66 From this pre cell population the founder groups A B C and then from them the precursor cells here named proto cells of the three domains of life 68 arose successively leading first to the domain Bacteria then to the domain Archea and finally to the domain Eucarya For the development of cells cellularisation the pre cells had to be protected from their surroundings by envelopes i e membranes walls For instance the development of rigid cell walls by the invention of peptidoglycan in bacteria domain Bacteria may have been a prerequisite for their successful survival radiation and colonisation of virtually all habitats of the geosphere and hydrosphere 66 This scenario may explain the quasi random distribution of evolutionarily important features among the three domains and at the same time the existence of the most basic biochemical features genetic code set of protein amino acids etc in all three domains unity of life as well as the close relationship between the Archaea and the Eucarya A scheme of the pre cell scenario is shown in the adjacent figure 66 where important evolutionary improvements are indicated by numbers Prebiotic environments edit Geothermal springs edit Wet dry cycles at geothermal springs are shown to solve the problem of hydrolysis and promote the polymerization and vesicle encapsulation of biopolymers 91 92 The temperatures of geothermal springs are suitable for biomolecules 93 Silica minerals and metal sulfides in these environments have photocatalytic properties to catalyze biomolecules Solar UV exposure also promotes the synthesis of biomolecules like RNA nucleotides 94 95 An analysis of hydrothermal veins at a 3 5 Gya geothermal spring setting were found to have elements required for the origin of life which are potassium boron hydrogen sulfur phosphorus zinc nitrogen and oxygen 96 Mulkidjanian and colleagues find that such environments have identical ionic concentrations to the cytoplasm of modern cells 94 Fatty acids in acidic or slightly alkaline geothermal springs assemble into vesicles after wet dry cycles as there is a lower concentration of ionic solutes at geothermal springs since they are freshwater environments in contrast to seawater which has a higher concentration of ionic solutes 97 For organic compounds to be present at geothermal springs they would have likely been transported by carbonaceous meteors The molecules that fell from the meteors were then accumulated in geothermal springs Geothermal springs can accumulate aqueous phosphate in the form of phopshoric acid Based on lab run models these concentrations of phoshate are insufficient to facilitate biosynthesis 98 As for the evolutionary implications freshwater heterotrophic cells that depended upon synthesized organic compounds later evolved photosynthesis because of the continuous exposure to sunlight as well as their cell walls with ion pumps to maintain their intracellular metabolism after they entered the oceans 92 Deep sea hydrothermal vents edit Catalytic mineral particles and transition metal sulfides at these environments are capable of catalyzing organic compounds 99 Scientists simulated laboratory conditions that were identical to white smokers and successfully oligomerized RNA measured to be 4 units long 100 Long chain fatty acids can be synthesized via Fischer Tropsch synthesis 101 Another experiment that replicated conditions also similar white smokers with long chain fatty acids present resulted in the assembly of vesicles 102 Exergonic reactions at hydrothermal vents are suggested to have been a source of free energy that promoted chemical reactions synthesis of organic molecules and are inducive to chemical gradients 103 In small rock pore systems membranous structures between alkaline seawater and the acidic ocean would be conducive to natural proton gradients 104 Nucleobase synthesis could occur by following universally conserved biochemical pathways by using metal ions as catalysts 101 RNA molecules of 22 bases can be polymerized in alkaline hydrothermal vent pores Thin pores are shown to only accumulate long polynucleotides whereas thick pores accumulate both short and long polynucleotides Small mineral cavities or mineral gels could have been a compartment for abiogenic processes 105 106 107 A genomic analysis supports this hypothesis as they found 355 genes that likely traced to LUCA upon 6 1 million sequenced prokaryotic genes They reconstruct LUCA as a thermophilic anaerobe with a Wood Ljungdahl pathway implying an origin of life at white smokers LUCA would also have exhibited other biochemical pathways such as gluconeogenesis reverse incomplete Krebs cycle glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway including biochemical reactions such as reductive amination and transamination 108 109 101 110 Life seeded from elsewhere edit Main article Panspermia The Panspermia hypothesis does not explain how life arose originally but simply examines the possibility of its coming from somewhere other than Earth The idea that life on Earth was seeded from elsewhere in the Universe dates back at least to the Greek philosopher Anaximander in the sixth century BCE 111 In the twentieth century it was proposed by the physical chemist Svante Arrhenius 112 by the astronomers Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe 113 and by molecular biologist Francis Crick and chemist Leslie Orgel 114 nbsp Potential bacterial fossils found on the Allan Hills Meteorite There are three main versions of the seeded from elsewhere hypothesis from elsewhere in our Solar System via fragments knocked into space by a large meteor impact in which case the most credible sources are Mars 115 and Venus 116 by alien visitors possibly as a result of accidental contamination by microorganisms that they brought with them 114 and from outside the Solar System but by natural means 112 115 Experiments in low Earth orbit such as EXOSTACK have demonstrated that some microorganism spores can survive the shock of being catapulted into space and some can survive exposure to outer space radiation for at least 5 7 years 117 118 Meteorite ALH84001 which was once part of the Martian crust shows evidence of carbonate globules with texture and size indicative of terrestrial bacterial activity 119 Scientists are divided over the likelihood of life arising independently on Mars 120 or on other planets in our galaxy 115 Carbonate rich lakes edit One theory traces the origins of life to the abundant carbonate rich lakes which would have dotted the early Earth Phosphate would have been an essential cornerstone to the origin of life since it is a critical component of nucleotides phospholipids and adenosine triphosphate 121 Phosphate is often depleted in natural environments due to its uptake by microbes and its affinity for calcium ions In a process called apatite precipitation free phosphate ions react with the calcium ions abundant in water to precipitate out of solution as apatite minerals 121 When attempting to simulate prebiotic phosphorylation scientists have only found success when using phosphorus levels far above modern day natural concentrations 98 This problem of low phosphate is solved in carbonate rich environments When in the presence of carbonate calcium readily reacts to form calcium carbonate instead of apatite minerals 122 With the free calcium ions removed from solution phosphate ions are no longer precipitated from solution 122 This is specifically seen in lakes with no inflow since no new calcium is introduced into the water body 98 After all of the calcium is sequestered into calcium carbonate calcite phosphate concentrations are able to increase to levels necessary for facilitating biomolecule creation 123 Though carbonate rich lakes have alkaline chemistry in modern times models suggest that carbonate lakes had a pH low enough for prebiotic synthesis when placed in the acidifying context of Earth s early carbon dioxide rich atmosphere 98 Rainwater rich in carbonic acid weathered the rock on the surface of the Earth at rates far greater than today 124 With high phosphate influx no phosphate precipitation and no microbial usage of phosphate at this time models show phosphate reached concentrations approximately 100 times greater than they are today 98 Modeled pH and phosphate levels of early Earth carbonate rich lakes nearly match the conditions used in current laboratory experiments on the origin of life 98 Similar to the process predicted by geothermal hot spring hypotheses changing lake levels and wave action deposited phosphorus rich brine onto dry shore and marginal pools 125 This drying of the solution promotes polymerization reactions and removes enough water to promote phosphorylation a process integral to biological energy storage and transfer 98 125 126 When washed away by further precipitation and wave action researchers concluded these newly formed biomolecules may have washed back into the lake allowing the first prebiotic syntheses on Earth to occur 98 Environmental and evolutionary impact of microbial mats editMain articles Microbial mat and Great Oxidation Event nbsp Modern stromatolites in Shark Bay Western Australia Microbial mats are multi layered multi species colonies of bacteria and other organisms that are generally only a few millimeters thick but still contain a wide range of chemical environments each of which favors a different set of microorganisms 127 To some extent each mat forms its own food chain as the by products of each group of microorganisms generally serve as food for adjacent groups 128 nbsp Traces like Epibaion from the Ediacaran represent trace fossils of feeding and movement by members of the phylum proarticulata Stromatolites are stubby pillars built as microorganisms in mats slowly migrate upwards to avoid being smothered by sediment deposited on them by water 127 There has been vigorous debate about the validity of alleged stromatolite fossils from before 3 Ga 129 with critics arguing that they could have been formed by non biological processes 57 In 2006 another find of stromatolites was reported from the same part of Australia in rocks dated to 3 5 Ga 130 In modern underwater mats the top layer often consists of photosynthesizing cyanobacteria which create an oxygen rich environment while the bottom layer is oxygen free and often dominated by hydrogen sulfide emitted by the organisms living there 128 Oxygen is toxic to organisms that are not adapted to it but greatly increases the metabolic efficiency of oxygen adapted organisms 131 132 oxygenic photosynthesis by bacteria in mats increased biological productivity by a factor of between 100 and 1 000 The source of hydrogen atoms used by oxygenic photosynthesis is water which is much more plentiful than the geologically produced reducing agents required by the earlier non oxygenic photosynthesis 133 From this point onwards life itself produced significantly more of the resources it needed than did geochemical processes 134 Oxygen became a significant component of Earth s atmosphere about 2 4 Ga 135 Although eukaryotes may have been present much earlier 136 137 the oxygenation of the atmosphere was a prerequisite for the evolution of the most complex eukaryotic cells from which all multicellular organisms are built 138 The boundary between oxygen rich and oxygen free layers in microbial mats would have moved upwards when photosynthesis shut down overnight and then downwards as it resumed on the next day This would have created selection pressure for organisms in this intermediate zone to acquire the ability to tolerate and then to use oxygen possibly via endosymbiosis where one organism lives inside another and both of them benefit from their association 12 Cyanobacteria have the most complete biochemical toolkits of all the mat forming organisms Hence they are the most self sufficient well adapted to strike out on their own both as floating mats and as the first of the phytoplankton provide the basis of most marine food chains 12 Diversification of eukaryotes editMain article Eukaryote Chromatin nucleus endomembrane system and mitochondria edit Eukaryotes may have been present long before the oxygenation of the atmosphere 136 but most modern eukaryotes require oxygen which is used by their mitochondria to fuel the production of ATP the internal energy supply of all known cells 138 In the 1970s a vigorous debate concluded that eukaryotes emerged as a result of a sequence of endosymbiosis between prokaryotes For example a predatory microorganism invaded a large prokaryote probably an archaean but instead of killing its prey the attacker took up residence and evolved into mitochondria one of these chimeras later tried to swallow a photosynthesizing cyanobacterium but the victim survived inside the attacker and the new combination became the ancestor of plants and so on After each endosymbiosis the partners eventually eliminated unproductive duplication of genetic functions by re arranging their genomes a process which sometimes involved transfer of genes between them 139 140 141 Another hypothesis proposes that mitochondria were originally sulfur or hydrogen metabolising endosymbionts and became oxygen consumers later 142 On the other hand mitochondria might have been part of eukaryotes original equipment 143 There is a debate about when eukaryotes first appeared the presence of steranes in Australian shales may indicate eukaryotes at 2 7 Ga 137 however an analysis in 2008 concluded that these chemicals infiltrated the rocks less than 2 2 Ga and prove nothing about the origins of eukaryotes 144 Fossils of the algae Grypania have been reported in 1 85 billion year old rocks originally dated to 2 1 Ga but later revised 15 indicating that eukaryotes with organelles had already evolved 145 A diverse collection of fossil algae were found in rocks dated between 1 5 and 1 4 Ga 146 The earliest known fossils of fungi date from 1 43 Ga 147 Plastids edit Plastids the superclass of organelles of which chloroplasts are the best known exemplar are thought to have originated from endosymbiotic cyanobacteria The symbiosis evolved around 1 5 Ga and enabled eukaryotes to carry out oxygenic photosynthesis 138 Three evolutionary lineages of photosynthetic plastids have since emerged chloroplasts in green algae and plants rhodoplasts in red algae and cyanelles in the glaucophytes 148 Not long after this primary endosymbiosis of plastids rhodoplasts and chloroplasts were passed down to other bikonts establishing an eukaryotic assemblage of phytoplankton by the end of the Neoproterozoic Eon Sexual reproduction and multicellular organisms editEvolution of sexual reproduction edit Main article Evolution of sexual reproduction The defining characteristics of sexual reproduction in eukaryotes are meiosis and fertilization resulting in genetic recombination giving offspring 50 of their genes from each parent 149 By contrast in asexual reproduction there is no recombination but occasional horizontal gene transfer Bacteria also exchange DNA by bacterial conjugation enabling the spread of resistance to antibiotics and other toxins and the ability to utilize new metabolites 150 However conjugation is not a means of reproduction and is not limited to members of the same species there are cases where bacteria transfer DNA to plants and animals 151 On the other hand bacterial transformation is clearly an adaptation for transfer of DNA between bacteria of the same species This is a complex process involving the products of numerous bacterial genes and can be regarded as a bacterial form of sex 152 153 This process occurs naturally in at least 67 prokaryotic species in seven different phyla 154 Sexual reproduction in eukaryotes may have evolved from bacterial transformation 155 The disadvantages of sexual reproduction are well known the genetic reshuffle of recombination may break up favorable combinations of genes and since males do not directly increase the number of offspring in the next generation an asexual population can out breed and displace in as little as 50 generations a sexual population that is equal in every other respect 149 Nevertheless the great majority of animals plants fungi and protists reproduce sexually There is strong evidence that sexual reproduction arose early in the history of eukaryotes and that the genes controlling it have changed very little since then 156 How sexual reproduction evolved and survived is an unsolved puzzle 157 nbsp Horodyskia may have been an early metazoan 15 or a colonial foraminiferan 158 It apparently re arranged itself into fewer but larger main masses as the sediment grew deeper round its base 15 The Red Queen hypothesis suggests that sexual reproduction provides protection against parasites because it is easier for parasites to evolve means of overcoming the defenses of genetically identical clones than those of sexual species that present moving targets and there is some experimental evidence for this However there is still doubt about whether it would explain the survival of sexual species if multiple similar clone species were present as one of the clones may survive the attacks of parasites for long enough to out breed the sexual species 149 Furthermore contrary to the expectations of the Red Queen hypothesis Kathryn A Hanley et al found that the prevalence abundance and mean intensity of mites was significantly higher in sexual geckos than in asexuals sharing the same habitat 159 In addition biologist Matthew Parker after reviewing numerous genetic studies on plant disease resistance failed to find a single example consistent with the concept that pathogens are the primary selective agent responsible for sexual reproduction in the host 160 Alexey Kondrashov s deterministic mutation hypothesis DMH assumes that each organism has more than one harmful mutation and that the combined effects of these mutations are more harmful than the sum of the harm done by each individual mutation If so sexual recombination of genes will reduce the harm that bad mutations do to offspring and at the same time eliminate some bad mutations from the gene pool by isolating them in individuals that perish quickly because they have an above average number of bad mutations However the evidence suggests that the DMH s assumptions are shaky because many species have on average less than one harmful mutation per individual and no species that has been investigated shows evidence of synergy between harmful mutations 149 The random nature of recombination causes the relative abundance of alternative traits to vary from one generation to another This genetic drift is insufficient on its own to make sexual reproduction advantageous but a combination of genetic drift and natural selection may be sufficient When chance produces combinations of good traits natural selection gives a large advantage to lineages in which these traits become genetically linked On the other hand the benefits of good traits are neutralized if they appear along with bad traits Sexual recombination gives good traits the opportunities to become linked with other good traits and mathematical models suggest this may be more than enough to offset the disadvantages of sexual reproduction 157 Other combinations of hypotheses that are inadequate on their own are also being examined 149 The adaptive function of sex remains a major unresolved issue in biology The competing models to explain it were reviewed by John A Birdsell and Christopher Wills 161 The hypotheses discussed above all depend on the possible beneficial effects of random genetic variation produced by genetic recombination An alternative view is that sex arose and is maintained as a process for repairing DNA damage and that the genetic variation produced is an occasionally beneficial byproduct 155 162 Multicellularity edit Main article Multicellular organism The simplest definitions of multicellular for example having multiple cells could include colonial cyanobacteria like Nostoc Even a technical definition such as having the same genome but different types of cell would still include some genera of the green algae Volvox which have cells that specialize in reproduction 163 Multicellularity evolved independently in organisms as diverse as sponges and other animals fungi plants brown algae cyanobacteria slime molds and myxobacteria 15 164 For the sake of brevity this article focuses on the organisms that show the greatest specialization of cells and variety of cell types although this approach to the evolution of biological complexity could be regarded as rather anthropocentric 16 nbsp A slime mold solves a maze The mold yellow explored and filled the maze left When the researchers placed sugar red at two separate points the mold concentrated most of its mass there and left only the most efficient connection between the two points right 165 The initial advantages of multicellularity may have included more efficient sharing of nutrients that are digested outside the cell 166 increased resistance to predators many of which attacked by engulfing the ability to resist currents by attaching to a firm surface the ability to reach upwards to filter feed or to obtain sunlight for photosynthesis 167 the ability to create an internal environment that gives protection against the external one 16 and even the opportunity for a group of cells to behave intelligently by sharing information 165 These features would also have provided opportunities for other organisms to diversify by creating more varied environments than flat microbial mats could 167 Multicellularity with differentiated cells is beneficial to the organism as a whole but disadvantageous from the point of view of individual cells most of which lose the opportunity to reproduce themselves In an asexual multicellular organism rogue cells which retain the ability to reproduce may take over and reduce the organism to a mass of undifferentiated cells Sexual reproduction eliminates such rogue cells from the next generation and therefore appears to be a prerequisite for complex multicellularity 167 The available evidence indicates that eukaryotes evolved much earlier but remained inconspicuous until a rapid diversification around 1 Ga The only respect in which eukaryotes clearly surpass bacteria and archaea is their capacity for variety of forms and sexual reproduction enabled eukaryotes to exploit that advantage by producing organisms with multiple cells that differed in form and function 167 By comparing the composition of transcription factor families and regulatory network motifs between unicellular organisms and multicellular organisms scientists found there are many novel transcription factor families and three novel types of regulatory network motifs in multicellular organisms and novel family transcription factors are preferentially wired into these novel network motifs which are essential for multicullular development These results propose a plausible mechanism for the contribution of novel family transcription factors and novel network motifs to the origin of multicellular organisms at transcriptional regulatory level 168 Fossil evidence edit The controversial Francevillian biota fossils dated to 2 1 Ga are the earliest known fossil organisms that are clearly multicellular if they are indeed fossils 40 They may have had differentiated cells 169 Another early multicellular fossil Qingshania dated to 1 7 Ga appears to consist of virtually identical cells The red algae called Bangiomorpha dated at 1 2 Ga is the earliest known organism that certainly has differentiated specialized cells and is also the oldest known sexually reproducing organism 167 The 1 43 billion year old fossils interpreted as fungi appear to have been multicellular with differentiated cells 147 The string of beads organism Horodyskia found in rocks dated from 1 5 Ga to 900 Ma may have been an early metazoan 15 however it has also been interpreted as a colonial foraminiferan 158 Emergence of animals editFurther information Animal Ediacaran biota Cambrian explosion Burgess Shale type fauna and Crown group Stem groups Bilaterians Deuterostomes chordates hemichordates echinoderms Protostomes Ecdysozoa arthropods nematodes tardigrades etc Lophotrochozoa molluscs annelids brachiopods etc Acoelomorpha Cnidaria jellyfish sea anemones corals Ctenophora comb jellies Placozoa Porifera sponges Calcarea Porifera Hexactinellida amp Demospongiae Choanoflagellata MesomycetozoeaA family tree of the animals 170 Animals are multicellular eukaryotes note 1 and are distinguished from plants algae and fungi by lacking cell walls 171 All animals are motile 172 if only at certain life stages All animals except sponges have bodies differentiated into separate tissues including muscles which move parts of the animal by contracting and nerve tissue which transmits and processes signals 173 In November 2019 researchers reported the discovery of Caveasphaera a multicellular organism found in 609 million year old rocks that is not easily defined as an animal or non animal which may be related to one of the earliest instances of animal evolution 174 175 Fossil studies of Caveasphaera have suggested that animal like embryonic development arose much earlier than the oldest clearly defined animal fossils 174 and may be consistent with studies suggesting that animal evolution may have begun about 750 million years ago 175 176 Nonetheless the earliest widely accepted animal fossils are the rather modern looking cnidarians the group that includes jellyfish sea anemones and Hydra possibly from around 580 Ma although fossils from the Doushantuo Formation can only be dated approximately Their presence implies that the cnidarian and bilaterian lineages had already diverged 177 The Ediacara biota which flourished for the last 40 million years before the start of the Cambrian 178 were the first animals more than a very few centimetres long Many were flat and had a quilted appearance and seemed so strange that there was a proposal to classify them as a separate kingdom Vendozoa 179 Others however have been interpreted as early molluscs Kimberella 180 181 echinoderms Arkarua 182 and arthropods Spriggina 183 Parvancorina 184 There is still debate about the classification of these specimens mainly because the diagnostic features which allow taxonomists to classify more recent organisms such as similarities to living organisms are generally absent in the Ediacarans However there seems little doubt that Kimberella was at least a triploblastic bilaterian animal in other words an animal significantly more complex than the cnidarians 185 The small shelly fauna are a very mixed collection of fossils found between the Late Ediacaran and Middle Cambrian periods The earliest Cloudina shows signs of successful defense against predation and may indicate the start of an evolutionary arms race Some tiny Early Cambrian shells almost certainly belonged to molluscs while the owners of some armor plates Halkieria and Microdictyon were eventually identified when more complete specimens were found in Cambrian lagerstatten that preserved soft bodied animals 186 nbsp Opabinia made the largest single contribution to modern interest in the Cambrian explosion 187 In the 1970s there was already a debate about whether the emergence of the modern phyla was explosive or gradual but hidden by the shortage of Precambrian animal fossils 186 A re analysis of fossils from the Burgess Shale lagerstatte increased interest in the issue when it revealed animals such as Opabinia which did not fit into any known phylum At the time these were interpreted as evidence that the modern phyla had evolved very rapidly in the Cambrian explosion and that the Burgess Shale s weird wonders showed that the Early Cambrian was a uniquely experimental period of animal evolution 188 Later discoveries of similar animals and the development of new theoretical approaches led to the conclusion that many of the weird wonders were evolutionary aunts or cousins of modern groups 189 for example that Opabinia was a member of the lobopods a group which includes the ancestors of the arthropods and that it may have been closely related to the modern tardigrades 190 Nevertheless there is still much debate about whether the Cambrian explosion was really explosive and if so how and why it happened and why it appears unique in the history of animals 191 Deuterostomes and the first vertebrates edit nbsp Acanthodians were among the earliest vertebrates with jaws 192 Main articles Chordate and Evolution of fish See also Chordate genomics Most of the animals at the heart of the Cambrian explosion debate were protostomes one of the two main groups of complex animals The other major group the deuterostomes contains invertebrates such as starfish and sea urchins echinoderms as well as chordates see below Many echinoderms have hard calcite shells which are fairly common from the Early Cambrian small shelly fauna onwards 186 Other deuterostome groups are soft bodied and most of the significant Cambrian deuterostome fossils come from the Chengjiang fauna a lagerstatte in China 193 The chordates are another major deuterostome group animals with a distinct dorsal nerve cord Chordates include soft bodied invertebrates such as tunicates as well as vertebrates animals with a backbone While tunicate fossils predate the Cambrian explosion 194 the Chengjiang fossils Haikouichthys and Myllokunmingia appear to be true vertebrates 24 and Haikouichthys had distinct vertebrae which may have been slightly mineralized 195 Vertebrates with jaws such as the acanthodians first appeared in the Late Ordovician 196 Colonization of land editSee also Earliest known life forms Adaptation to life on land is a major challenge all land organisms need to avoid drying out and all those above microscopic size must create special structures to withstand gravity respiration and gas exchange systems have to change reproductive systems cannot depend on water to carry eggs and sperm towards each other 197 198 199 Although the earliest good evidence of land plants and animals dates back to the Ordovician period 488 to 444 Ma and a number of microorganism lineages made it onto land much earlier 200 201 modern land ecosystems only appeared in the Late Devonian about 385 to 359 Ma 202 In May 2017 evidence of the earliest known life on land may have been found in 3 48 billion year old geyserite and other related mineral deposits often found around hot springs and geysers uncovered in the Pilbara Craton of Western Australia 203 204 In July 2018 scientists reported that the earliest life on land may have been bacteria living on land 3 22 billion years ago 205 In May 2019 scientists reported the discovery of a fossilized fungus named Ourasphaira giraldae in the Canadian Arctic that may have grown on land a billion years ago well before plants were living on land 206 207 208 Evolution of terrestrial antioxidants edit Oxygen began to accumulate in Earth s atmosphere over 3 Ga as a by product of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria blue green algae However oxygen produces destructive chemical oxidation which was toxic to most previous organisms Protective endogenous antioxidant enzymes and exogenous dietary antioxidants helped to prevent oxidative damage For example brown algae accumulate inorganic mineral antioxidants such as rubidium vanadium zinc iron copper molybdenum selenium and iodine concentrated more than 30 000 times more than in seawater Most marine mineral antioxidants act in the cells as essential trace elements in redox and antioxidant metalloenzymes citation needed When plants and animals began to enter rivers and land about 500 Ma environmental deficiency of these marine mineral antioxidants was a challenge to the evolution of terrestrial life 209 210 Terrestrial plants slowly optimized the production of new endogenous antioxidants such as ascorbic acid polyphenols flavonoids tocopherols etc A few of these appeared more recently in last 200 50 Ma in fruits and flowers of angiosperm plants citation needed In fact angiosperms the dominant type of plant today and most of their antioxidant pigments evolved during the Late Jurassic period Plants employ antioxidants to defend their structures against reactive oxygen species produced during photosynthesis Animals are exposed to the same oxidants and they have evolved endogenous enzymatic antioxidant systems 211 Iodine in the form of the iodide ion I is the most primitive and abundant electron rich essential element in the diet of marine and terrestrial organisms it acts as an electron donor and has this ancestral antioxidant function in all iodide concentrating cells from primitive marine algae to terrestrial vertebrates 212 Evolution of soil edit Before the colonization of land there was no soil a combination of mineral particles and decomposed organic matter Land surfaces were either bare rock or shifting sand produced by weathering Water and dissolved nutrients would have drained away very quickly 202 In the Sub Cambrian peneplain in Sweden for example maximum depth of kaolinitization by Neoproterozoic weathering is about 5 m while nearby kaolin deposits developed in the Mesozoic are much thicker 213 It has been argued that in the late Neoproterozoic sheet wash was a dominant process of erosion of surface material due to the lack of plants on land 214 nbsp Lichens growing on concrete Films of cyanobacteria which are not plants but use the same photosynthesis mechanisms have been found in modern deserts in areas unsuitable for vascular plants This suggests that microbial mats may have been the first organisms to colonize dry land possibly in the Precambrian Mat forming cyanobacteria could have gradually evolved resistance to desiccation as they spread from the seas to intertidal zones and then to land 202 Lichens which are symbiotic combinations of a fungus almost always an ascomycete and one or more photosynthesizers green algae or cyanobacteria 215 are also important colonizers of lifeless environments 202 and their ability to break down rocks contributes to soil formation where plants cannot survive 215 The earliest known ascomycete fossils date from 423 to 419 Ma in the Silurian 202 Soil formation would have been very slow until the appearance of burrowing animals which mix the mineral and organic components of soil and whose feces are a major source of organic components 202 Burrows have been found in Ordovician sediments and are attributed to annelids worms or arthropods 202 216 Plants and the Late Devonian wood crisis edit Main article Evolutionary history of plants nbsp Reconstruction of Cooksonia a vascular plant from the Silurian nbsp Fossilized trees from the Middle Devonian Gilboa Fossil Forest In aquatic algae almost all cells are capable of photosynthesis and are nearly independent Life on land requires plants to become internally more complex and specialized photosynthesis is most efficient at the top roots extract water and nutrients from the ground and the intermediate parts support and transport 197 217 Spores of land plants resembling liverworts have been found in Middle Ordovician rocks from 476 Ma Middle Silurian rocks from 430 Ma contain fossils of true plants including clubmosses such as Baragwanathia most were under 10 centimetres 3 9 in high and some appear closely related to vascular plants the group that includes trees 217 By the Late Devonian 370 Ma abundant trees such as Archaeopteris bound the soil so firmly that they changed river systems from mostly braided to mostly meandering 218 This caused the Late Devonian wood crisis because 219 They removed more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere reducing the greenhouse effect and thus causing an ice age in the Carboniferous period 21 This did not repeat in later ecosystems since the carbon dioxide locked up in wood was returned to the atmosphere by decomposition of dead wood but the earliest fossil evidence of fungi that can decompose wood also comes from the Late Devonian 220 The increasing depth of plants roots led to more washing of nutrients into rivers and seas by rain This caused algal blooms whose high consumption of oxygen caused anoxic events in deeper waters increasing the extinction rate among deep water animals 21 Land invertebrates edit Animals had to change their feeding and excretory systems and most land animals developed internal fertilization of their eggs 199 The difference in refractive index between water and air required changes in their eyes On the other hand in some ways movement and breathing became easier and the better transmission of high frequency sounds in the air encouraged the development of hearing 198 The oldest animal with evidence of air breathing although not being the oldest myriapod fossil record is Pneumodesmus an archipolypodan millipede from the Early Devonian about 414 Ma 221 Its air breathing terrestrial nature is evidenced by the presence of spiracles the openings to tracheal systems 222 However some earlier trace fossils from the Cambrian Ordovician boundary about 490 Ma are interpreted as the tracks of large amphibious arthropods on coastal sand dunes and may have been made by euthycarcinoids 223 which are thought to be evolutionary aunts of myriapods 224 Other trace fossils from the Late Ordovician a little over 445 Ma probably represent land invertebrates and there is clear evidence of numerous arthropods on coasts and alluvial plains shortly before the Silurian Devonian boundary about 415 Ma including signs that some arthropods ate plants 225 Arthropods were well pre adapted to colonise land because their existing jointed exoskeletons provided protection against desiccation support against gravity and a means of locomotion that was not dependent on water 199 226 The fossil record of other major invertebrate groups on land is poor none at all for non parasitic flatworms nematodes or nemerteans some parasitic nematodes have been fossilized in amber annelid worm fossils are known from the Carboniferous but they may still have been aquatic animals the earliest fossils of gastropods on land date from the Late Carboniferous and this group may have had to wait until leaf litter became abundant enough to provide the moist conditions they need 198 The earliest confirmed fossils of flying insects date from the Late Carboniferous but it is thought that insects developed the ability to fly in the Early Carboniferous or even Late Devonian This gave them a wider range of ecological niches for feeding and breeding and a means of escape from predators and from unfavorable changes in the environment 227 About 99 of modern insect species fly or are descendants of flying species 228 Amphibians edit Main articles Tetrapod and Evolution of tetrapods nbsp Acanthostega changed views about the early evolution of tetrapods 229 Fish Osteolepiformes Panderichthyidae Obruchevichthidae Acanthostega Ichthyostega Tulerpeton Early labyrinthodonts Anthracosauria AmniotesFamily tree of tetrapods 230 Tetrapods vertebrates with four limbs evolved from other rhipidistian fish over a relatively short timespan during the Late Devonian 370 to 360 Ma 231 The early groups are grouped together as Labyrinthodontia They retained aquatic fry like tadpoles a system still seen in modern amphibians Iodine and T4 T3 stimulate the amphibian metamorphosis and the evolution of nervous systems transforming the aquatic vegetarian tadpole into a more evolved terrestrial carnivorous frog with better neurological visuospatial olfactory and cognitive abilities for hunting 209 The new hormonal action of T3 was made possible by the formation of T3 receptors in the cells of vertebrates First about 600 500 million years ago the alpha T3 receptors with a metamorphosing action appeared in primitive chordates and then about 250 150 million years ago the beta T3 receptors with metabolic and thermogenetic actions appeared in birds and mammals 232 From the 1950s to the early 1980s it was thought that tetrapods evolved from fish that had already acquired the ability to crawl on land possibly in order to go from a pool that was drying out to one that was deeper However in 1987 nearly complete fossils of Acanthostega from about 363 Ma showed that this Late Devonian transitional animal had legs and both lungs and gills but could never have survived on land its limbs and its wrist and ankle joints were too weak to bear its weight its ribs were too short to prevent its lungs from being squeezed flat by its weight its fish like tail fin would have been damaged by dragging on the ground The current hypothesis is that Acanthostega which was about 1 metre 3 3 ft long was a wholly aquatic predator that hunted in shallow water Its skeleton differed from that of most fish in ways that enabled it to raise its head to breathe air while its body remained submerged including its jaws show modifications that would have enabled it to gulp air the bones at the back of its skull are locked together providing strong attachment points for muscles that raised its head the head is not joined to the shoulder girdle and it has a distinct neck 229 The Devonian proliferation of land plants may help to explain why air breathing would have been an advantage leaves falling into streams and rivers would have encouraged the growth of aquatic vegetation this would have attracted grazing invertebrates and small fish that preyed on them they would have been attractive prey but the environment was unsuitable for the big marine predatory fish air breathing would have been necessary because these waters would have been short of oxygen since warm water holds less dissolved oxygen than cooler marine water and since the decomposition of vegetation would have used some of the oxygen 229 Later discoveries revealed earlier transitional forms between Acanthostega and completely fish like animals 233 Unfortunately there is then a gap Romer s gap of about 30 Ma between the fossils of ancestral tetrapods and Middle Carboniferous fossils of vertebrates that look well adapted for life on land during which only some fossils are found which had five digits in the terminating point of the four limbs showing true or crown tetrapods appeared in the gap around 350 Ma Some of the fossils after this gap look as if the animals which they belonged to were early relatives of modern amphibians all of which need to keep their skins moist and to lay their eggs in water while others are accepted as early relatives of the amniotes whose waterproof skin and egg membranes enable them to live and breed far from water 230 The Carboniferous Rainforest Collapse may have paved the way for amniotes to become dominant over amphibians Reptiles edit Further information Evolution of dinosaurs Origin of birds and Evolution of mammals Amniotes Synapsids Early synapsids extinct Pelycosaurs Extinct pelycosaurs Therapsids Extinct therapsids Mammaliaformes Extinct mammaliaforms Mammals Sauropsids Anapsids whether turtles belong here is debated 234 Captorhinidae and Protorothyrididae extinct Diapsids Araeoscelidia extinct Squamata lizards and snakes Archosaurs Extinct archosaurs Crocodilians Pterosaurs extinct Dinosaurs Theropods Extincttheropods Birds Sauropods extinct Ornithischians extinct Possible family tree of dinosaurs birds and mammals 235 236 Amniotes whose eggs can survive in dry environments probably evolved in the Late Carboniferous period 330 to 298 9 Ma The earliest fossils of the two surviving amniote groups synapsids and sauropsids date from around 313 Ma 235 236 The synapsid pelycosaurs and their descendants the therapsids are the most common land vertebrates in the best known Permian 298 9 to 251 9 Ma fossil beds However at the time these were all in temperate zones at middle latitudes and there is evidence that hotter drier environments nearer the Equator were dominated by sauropsids and amphibians 237 The Permian Triassic extinction event wiped out almost all land vertebrates 238 as well as the great majority of other life 239 During the slow recovery from this catastrophe estimated to have taken 30 million years 240 a previously obscure sauropsid group became the most abundant and diverse terrestrial vertebrates a few fossils of archosauriformes ruling lizard forms have been found in Late Permian rocks 241 but by the Middle Triassic archosaurs were the dominant land vertebrates Dinosaurs distinguished themselves from other archosaurs in the Late Triassic and became the dominant land vertebrates of the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods 201 4 to 66 Ma 242 Birds edit During the Late Jurassic birds evolved from small predatory theropod dinosaurs 243 The first birds inherited teeth and long bony tails from their dinosaur ancestors 243 but some had developed horny toothless beaks by the very Late Jurassic 244 and short pygostyle tails by the Early Cretaceous 245 Mammals edit While the archosaurs and dinosaurs were becoming more dominant in the Triassic the mammaliaform successors of the therapsids evolved into small mainly nocturnal insectivores This ecological role may have promoted the evolution of mammals for example nocturnal life may have accelerated the development of endothermy warm bloodedness and hair or fur 246 By 195 Ma in the Early Jurassic there were animals that were very like today s mammals in a number of respects 247 Unfortunately there is a gap in the fossil record throughout the Middle Jurassic 248 However fossil teeth discovered in Madagascar indicate that the split between the lineage leading to monotremes and the one leading to other living mammals had occurred by 167 Ma 249 After dominating land vertebrate niches for about 150 Ma the non avian dinosaurs perished in the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event 66 Ma along with many other groups of organisms 250 Mammals throughout the time of the dinosaurs had been restricted to a narrow range of taxa sizes and shapes but increased rapidly in size and diversity after the extinction 251 252 with bats taking to the air within 13 million years 253 and cetaceans to the sea within 15 million years 254 Flowering plants edit Main article Flowering plant Gymnosperms Gnetales gymnosperm Welwitschia gymnosperm Ephedra gymnosperm Bennettitales Angiosperms flowering plants One possible family tree of flowering plants 255 Gymnosperms Angiosperms flowering plants Cycads gymnosperm Bennettitales Ginkgo Gnetales gymnosperm Conifers gymnosperm Another possible family tree 256 The first flowering plants appeared around 130 Ma 257 The 250 000 to 400 000 species of flowering plants outnumber all other ground plants combined and are the dominant vegetation in most terrestrial ecosystems There is fossil evidence that flowering plants diversified rapidly in the Early Cretaceous from 130 to 90 Ma 255 256 and that their rise was associated with that of pollinating insects 256 Among modern flowering plants Magnolia are thought to be close to the common ancestor of the group 255 However paleontologists have not succeeded in identifying the earliest stages in the evolution of flowering plants 255 256 Social insects edit nbsp These termite mounds have survived a bush fire Main article Eusociality The social insects are remarkable because the great majority of individuals in each colony are sterile This appears contrary to basic concepts of evolution such as natural selection and the selfish gene In fact there are very few eusocial insect species only 15 out of approximately 2 600 living families of insects contain eusocial species and it seems that eusociality has evolved independently only 12 times among arthropods although some eusocial lineages have diversified into several families Nevertheless social insects have been spectacularly successful for example although ants and termites account for only about 2 of known insect species they form over 50 of the total mass of insects Their ability to control a territory appears to be the foundation of their success 258 The sacrifice of breeding opportunities by most individuals has long been explained as a consequence of these species unusual haplodiploid method of sex determination which has the paradoxical consequence that two sterile worker daughters of the same queen share more genes with each other than they would with their offspring if they could breed 259 However E O Wilson and Bert Holldobler argue that this explanation is faulty for example it is based on kin selection but there is no evidence of nepotism in colonies that have multiple queens Instead they write eusociality evolves only in species that are under strong pressure from predators and competitors but in environments where it is possible to build fortresses after colonies have established this security they gain other advantages through co operative foraging In support of this explanation they cite the appearance of eusociality in bathyergid mole rats 258 which are not haplodiploid 260 The earliest fossils of insects have been found in Early Devonian rocks from about 400 Ma which preserve only a few varieties of flightless insect The Mazon Creek lagerstatten from the Late Carboniferous about 300 Ma include about 200 species some gigantic by modern standards and indicate that insects had occupied their main modern ecological niches as herbivores detritivores and insectivores Social termites and ants first appeared in the Early Cretaceous and advanced social bees have been found in Late Cretaceous rocks but did not become abundant until the Middle Cenozoic 261 Humans edit Main article Human evolution The idea that along with other life forms modern day humans evolved from an ancient common ancestor was proposed by Robert Chambers in 1844 and taken up by Charles Darwin in 1871 262 Modern humans evolved from a lineage of upright walking apes that has been traced back over 6 Ma to Sahelanthropus 263 The first known stone tools were made about 2 5 Ma apparently by Australopithecus garhi and were found near animal bones that bear scratches made by these tools 264 The earliest hominines had chimpanzee sized brains but there has been a fourfold increase in the last 3 Ma a statistical analysis suggests that hominine brain sizes depend almost completely on the date of the fossils while the species to which they are assigned has only slight influence 265 There is a long running debate about whether modern humans evolved all over the world simultaneously from existing advanced hominines or are descendants of a single small population in Africa which then migrated all over the world less than 200 000 years ago and replaced previous hominine species 266 There is also debate about whether anatomically modern humans had an intellectual cultural and technological Great Leap Forward under 100 000 years ago and if so whether this was due to neurological changes that are not visible in fossils 267 Mass extinctions editMain article Extinction event nbsp Marine extinction intensity during Phanerozoic Millions of years ago H K Pg Tr J P Tr Cap Late D O S nbsp Apparent extinction intensity i e the fraction of genera going extinct at any given time as reconstructed from the fossil record Graph not meant to include the recent ongoing Holocene extinction event Life on Earth has suffered occasional mass extinctions at least since 542 Ma Although they were disasters at the time mass extinctions have sometimes accelerated the evolution of life on Earth When dominance of particular ecological niches passes from one group of organisms to another it is rarely because the new dominant group is superior to the old and usually because an extinction event eliminates the old dominant group and makes way for the new one 31 268 nbsp All genera Well defined genera Trend line Big Five mass extinctions Other mass extinctions Million years ago Thousands of genera nbsp Phanerozoic biodiversity as shown by the fossil record The fossil record appears to show that the gaps between mass extinctions are becoming longer and that the average and background rates of extinction 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