Loch fossils show how photosynthesis, sexual reproduction started
April 14th, 2011 - 1:53 pm ICT by ANILondon, Apr 14 (ANI): Scientists have discovered fossils from remote lochs along the west coast of Scotland that help to explain how photosynthesis and sexual reproduction were made possible.
A team of scientists from the University of Sheffield, the University of Oxford and Boston College, explored rocks around Loch Torridon, and discovered the remarkably preserved remains of organisms that once lived on the bottom of ancient lake beds as long as a billion years ago.
These fossils illuminate a key moment in the history of evolution when life made the leap from tiny, simple bacterial (prokaryote) cells towards larger, more complex (eukaryotic) cells.
Some of these ancient fossils are so finely ornamented, and so large and complex, that they are evidence for a surprisingly early start for the emergence of complex eukaryote cells on land.
The researchers believe that it was from complex cells such as these that green algae and green land plants - everything from lettuce to larch trees - were able to evolve and colonise the land.
Around 500 million years after the emergence of these complex cells, the surface of the land was starting to become covered in simple vegetation like lichens, mosses and liverworts, and the first animals were able to take their chance and leave the sea behind.
These pioneers were followed by the first fish and ferns, reptiles and conifers, mammals and flowering plants - and, eventually, humans.
Dr Charles Wellman, Reader in Palaeobiology at the University of Sheffield’s Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, is an author on the paper.
“It is generally considered that life originated in the ocean and that the important developments in the early evolution of life took place in the marine environment: the origin of prokaryotes, eukaryotes, sex and multicellularity,” he said.
“During this time the continents are often considered to have been essentially barren of life - or at the most with an insignificant microbial biota dominated by cyanobacteria.
“We have discovered evidence for complex life on land from 1 billion year old deposits from Scotland. This suggests that life on land at this time was more abundant and complex than anticipated.
“It also opens the intriguing possibility that some of the major events in the early history of life may have taken place on land and not entirely within the marine realm,” he explained.
Professor Martin Brasier of the University of Oxford’s Department of Earth Sciences, an author of the paper, said the new cells differed from their bacterial ancestors, in that they have specialised structures including a nucleus, as well as mitochondria and chloroplasts - which are vital for photosynthesis.
“They also undergo sexual reproduction, leading to much more rapid rates of evolutionary turnover,” Brasier said.
“It may even be that the sort of conditions found in the ancient lakes around Loch Torridon favoured a key step in this transformation, which involved the incorporation of symbiotic bacteria into the cell to form chloroplasts, rather than this occurring in the sea as usually envisaged.
“None of this would have been possible without advances long ago made by these little microbes, now entombed within phosphate from the Torridon lakes.
“It was arguably these organisms that helped to turn our landscape from a harsh and rocky desert into a green and pleasant place,” he added.
The research, entitled ‘Earth’s earliest non-marine eukaryotes’, has been published in Nature. (ANI)
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Tags: ancient fossils, boston college, eukaryote cells, eukaryotic cells, first fish, flowering plants, green algae, lake beds, land plants, larch trees, lochs, marine environment, mosses and liverworts, plant sciences, prokaryote cells, sexual reproduction, torridon, university of oxford, university of sheffield, wellman