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A history of life on earth – Chapter 5 Important patterns in the history of life Climates and land masses have changed over time Taxonomic composition has changed There are periods of mass extinction High diversification, esp. after mass extinctions Diversification includes increases in number of species and variety of forms Important patterns in the history of life Extinct taxa replaced by similar but unrelated forms Ancestral members of a taxa more alike than their descendants Only a few members of higher taxa have persisted Geographic distribution has changed greatly The Big Bang Theory 12-15 billion years ago all matter and energy were concentrated into a (relatively) small space the size of our sun About ten billion years ago, the Universe began in a gigantic explosion Matter then condensed to form atoms, elements, and eventually galaxies and stars Geologic time units Eon – a unit of time equal to 1 billion years Era – a unit of time marked by a new or distinct order of things Period – an unit of time of any length Epoch – a period that began by some significant change or event Geologic Time Line Geological time Formation of Earth Earth was formed 4.6 billion years ago by the collision and aggregation of many smaller bodies As Earth cooled, crust formed and water and other gases were released Earth is “just right” for life If Earth were smaller in diameter, gravity would not be great enough to hold on to atmosphere If Earth were closer to sun, water would have evaporated If Earth were further from sun, water would have been ice What is life? Self-replication Differential reproduction, with variation = genotype Metabolism Intake, processing, outflow of materials = phenotype Individuality Coherence as integrated system, subject to selection All life is related All share similar features Use only L-optical isomers of amino acids Universality of genetic code Archeon Eon 3.8 – 2.5 bya Chemical and molecular evolution First cells (anaerobic bacteria) How did life originate? The problem… Simple chemicals DNA, RNA, proteins (enzymes!), membranes metabolism integrated system! The setting… Energy: lightning, volcanoes, sunlight, heat Materials: CO2, CO, N2, H2O, CH4? NH3? But NO oxygen! Environment: rocks, water PRIMORDIAL SOUP The Oparin-Haldane model Stanley Miller made his own “soup”: CH4 + NH3 + H2 + ENERGY = amino acids, sugars Some controversy now over whether this adequately represented earth’s atmosphere Simple organic chemicals can be made by abiotic chemical reactions Origin of agents of metabolism Spontaneous formation of porphyrin rings from formaldehyde Components of chlorophylls and cytochromes The RNA World Probably some sort of simple, self-replicating polymers arose; later, RNAbased system spread RNA has catalytic properties (ribozymes can cut, splice, elongate other oligonucleotides) Experimental evolution of RNA has been shown The RNA World So far, though, no demonstration that RNA can completely copy itself; only short sequences can be copied by ribozymes If RNAs associate into ‘individuals’, copying by ribozymes is more efficient The evolution of protein enzymes may be biggest remaining question - a very active area of research! Going Cellular Compartmentalization into ‘individuals’ makes replication more efficient Lipid membranes spontaneously self-assemble Possible sequence leading to self-replicating systems The first cells Stromatolites from 3.5 bya Were prokaryotic heterotrophs Secured energy through anaerobic pathways No oxygen present Relied on glycolysis and fermentation Origin of photosynthesis Origin of photosynthetic eubacteria Noncyclic pathway first (3.5 mya) Cyclic pathway next (2.5 bya) Oxygen accumulates in atmosphere and increases greatly 2.2 bya Origin of aerobic respiration The first cells were prokaryotes Reminder: prokaryotes are single celled organisms lacking a nuclear envelope Two of the three domains (Bacteria, Archaea) are prokaryotes Prokaryotes were only life forms for 2 billion years Prokaryotic cells Archaebacteria Live in extreme habitats Salt, extreme temperatures, anaerobic Methane-producing bacteria Bacteria Live everywhere - aerobic conditions Live on your skin, digestive systems Eukarya Distinct nucleus with membrane, distinct chromosomes; majority with organelles, many multicellular Protistans Some are single cell/others are multicellular Larger than bacteria Usually live in aquatic environments Amoeba, paramecium, algae Fungi Plants Animals Emergence of eukarya Fossils from 1.5 bya Chemical evidence of emergence 2.7 bya Where did organelles come from? Theory of Endosymbiosis Free-living prokaryotes were engulfed by early eukaryotes and became permanent internal symbionts Theory of endosymbiosis Mitochondria and chloroplasts resemble simple bacteria Sequencing of plastids from organelles suggests bacterial symbiont origin Membrane number suggests origin type Theory of endosymbiosis Some extant eucarya have no mitochondria Rely on endosymbiotic bacteria for respiration Theory of endosymbiosis Corals and algae Deep sea fish ‘headlights’ Multicellularity Origin of life, 3500 mya 1500 mya eukaryotes 640 mya large multicellular animals WHY THE WAIT? Multicellularity Multicellular organisms need more oxygen than single-celled organisms Advantages of multicellularity Replacement of cells = longer life Larger organisms have greater physiological stability Cell differentiation into tissues means different sorts of body architectures (can exploit new niches) Ingest small organisms, produce more offspring Disadvantages of multicellularity Longer development means later reproduction (lower r) Larger size means problems with respiration, circulation (volume increases more rapidly than surface area) Paleozoic Era (570-240 mya) Cambrian period 542-489 mya Continents were flooded by shallow seas The super continent of Gondwana just formed The Cambrian explosion At beginning of Cambrian Period, modern animal phyla present, little in fossil record By 530 Ma, almost all modern animal phyla present in fossil record! Brachiopods and trilobites Burgess Shale of British Columbia The Cambrian Explosion Earliest known vertebrate ancestors Teeth of cellular bone, lacked vertebrae but had notochord: conodonts Animal body plans evolved during Cambrian What caused the Cambrian Explosion? Environmental changes: increased O2, calcium carbonate (for shells!) Ecological setting: lots of unfilled niches, available as new modes of locomotion evolved Key innovations: multicellularity, important new developmental pathways Why no replay? Similar availability of niches after end-Permian extinction! Developmental processes malleable in early metazoans, but more canalized later: can’t evolve truly unique forms End of Cambrian Extinction marked the end of the Cambrian period, perhaps caused by cooling of the seas Trilobites greatly reduced Several classes of echinoderms extinct