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The Cambrian Explosion and Beyond

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Title: The Cambrian Explosion and Beyond


1
The Cambrian Explosion and Beyond
  • Chapter 17

2
Fig. 2.18 The geological time scale
3
Limitations of the fossil record
  • Hard parts shells, bones, teeth most likely
    to be fossilized because they decay slowly and
    are more durable
  • In order to be fossilized, a specimen generally
    needs to be covered quickly by water-borne or
    wind-borne sediments (sand, mud, ash)
  • Lack of oxygen is favorable for fossilization
  • The fossil record consists primarily of hard
    parts left in depositional environments such as
    river deltas, beaches, flood plains, marshes,
    lakeshores, and the sea floor the fossil record
    is biased

4
Early animals Ediacaran fauna(565 544 mya)
  • First multicellular animals appear about 565
    million years ago (mya)
  • Simple, small, asymmetric or radially symmetric
    sponges, jellyfish
  • Few bilaterally symmetric forms, such as
    Kimberella, which has uncertain affinities, but
    appears to be mollusc-like
  • Dickinsonia considered by some to be an annelid
    worm, and by others to be cnidarian (jellyfish)
    polyp

5
Kimberellahttp//www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/vendian/ki
mberella2.html
6
Dickinsoniahttp//www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/vendian/d
ickinsonia.jpg
7
The Cambrian explosion
  • Cambrian period 543 495 mya
  • Explosive appearance of large, complex,
    bilaterally symmetric animals, segmented animals
    with limbs, antennae, shells, external skeletons,
    and notochords including arthropods, molluscs,
    annelids, and chordates within the period 543
    506 mya
  • Almost all living animal phyla are present
  • Burgess shale fauna (Simon Conway Morris
    Stephen Jay Gould, Wonderful Life, 1989)

8
The first animals phylogeny and fossils (Fig.
17.12)
9
Macroevolutionary Patterns
  • Adaptive radiation
  • Punctuated equilibrium versus gradualism
  • Extinction
  • Taxon survivorship curves
  • Mass extinctions
  • The Cretaceous Tertiary (K-T) impact extinction
  • Anthropogenic extinction

10
Adaptive Radiation
  • An adaptive radiation occurs when a single or a
    small group of ancestral species rapidly
    diversifies into a large number of descendant
    species that occupy a wide variety of ecological
    niches
  • Adaptive radiations can occur when
  • A species colonizes a new region where there are
    no or few competitors (i.e., lots of empty
    niches) Galápagos finches, Hawaiian Drosophila
    and silver swords
  • A taxon acquires an important adaptation
    evolution of flight in birds
  • A taxon is released from competition after
    extinction of a dominant group radiation of
    mammals after extinction of the dinosaurs (?)

11
Darwins Finches (Fig. 3.4)
12
Adaptive radiation (Fig. 17.13)
13
Punctuated Equilibrium
  • Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould, 1972
  • The fossil record for some groups reveals that
    morphological evolution consists of long periods
    of stasis with little or no change and very short
    periods during which morphological change occurs
    in association with speciation
  • Presented as a challenge to the conventional
    picture of morphological evolution described by
    the modern synthesis

14
The controversy
  • Phyletic gradualism
  • New species arise by transformation of large
    ancestral groups (often without splitting
    anagenesis)
  • Transformation occurs over all or a large part of
    the ancestral species geographic range
  • Transformation is even and slow
  • Evolution occurs more or less at the same rate
    during and between speciation events
  • Punctuated equilibrium
  • A small subgroup of the ancestral form gives rise
    to a new group by splitting cladogenesis
  • New species originates in a small part of the
    ancestral species geographic range peripheral
    isolates model
  • New species develop rapidly, then may replace
    ancestral species
  • Between speciation events there is stasis

15
Patterns of morphological change punctuated
equilibrium and gradualism (Fig. 17.15)
16
Explaining the fossil record
  • Darwin was aware of this problem and he
    explained the apparent discontinuities and sudden
    transitions in the fossil record as being due to
    the incompleteness of the fossil record
  • Eldredge and Gould argued that sudden
    transformations are not artifacts speciation
    occurs rapidly and in small populations and is,
    therefore, unlikely to leave a fossil record

17
Testing punctuated equilibrium
  • Strong tests of punctuated equilibrium vs.
    phyletic gradualism are difficult
  • Need a complete stratigraphic sequence
  • Are morphospecies biological species?
  • Cryptic species?
  • Need multiple specimens and populations of each
    species in order to determine the range of
    variation within species

18
Punctuated change in cheilostome Bryozoa (Jackson
and Cheetham 1994) (Fig. 17.16)
19
Who wins?
  • Erwin and Antsey (1995) review of 58 tests of
    punctuated equilibrium
  • Paleontological evidence overwhelmingly supports
    a view that speciation is sometimes gradual and
    sometimes punctuated, and that no one mode
    characterizes this very complicated process in
    the history of life.
  • About 1/3 of the studies support a combination of
    gradualism and stasis
  • Time-scale effects when the resolution of the
    fossil record is on the order of 10s of
    thousands of years, morphological change may
    appear sudden, but if we had been present
    during a 10,000 year period to witness it, it
    might have seemed gradual

20
Genetic and morphological change in two arthropod
clades (Fig. 17.18)a. Horseshoe crabs today are
almost identical to those that lived 150 million
years agob. Hermit crabs and alliesGenetic
distances based on 16s rRNA gene sequences
21
Extinction
  • Extinction is the ultimate fate of all species
  • Mass extinctions
  • The big five
  • Global in extent
  • Involve a broad range of organisms
  • Rapid
  • Background extinction
  • Accounts for the vast majority of extinctions

22
Distribution of species extinction
intensities(Raup 1994) (Fig. 17.20)
23
Patterns of extinctions of families through time
(Benton 1995) (Fig. 17.21)
24
Survivorship curves for taxa
  • Leigh Van Valen (1973) showed that the
    probability of extinction of a taxon was
    independent of its age a taxon does not become
    more, or less, likely to go extinct as it gets
    older

25
Survivorship curves for genera and families(Van
Valen 1973) (Fig. 17.22)
26
How long does a species of marine bivalve exist?
(Jablonski 1986) (Fig. 17.23)Species with
planktonic larvae have longer durations than do
species with direct development
27
Geographic range affects the survivorship of
bivalve and gastropod species (Jablonski 1986)
(Fig. 17.24)
28
The Cretaceous Tertiary (K-T) extinction
  • World-wide iridium anomaly at the K-T boundary
    dated to 65 mya
  • Iridium is rare in the Earths crust but more
    abundant in meteorites
  • Based on the amount of iridium required to
    produce the deposits seen at the K-T boundary,
    Alvarez et al. (1980) estimated that a 10 km (6.2
    mi) diameter asteroid hit the earth
  • The asteroid theory is supported by the presence
    of shocked quartz crystals, glass microtektites,
    and a 180 km (112 mi) diameter crater in the
    ocean near the Yucatán Peninsula

29
Iridium anomaly at the K-T boundary (Fig. 17.25 b)
30
Location and shape of the Chicxulub crater
(Schultz and DHondt 1996) (Fig. 17.26)
31
Effects of a 10 km asteroid impact
  • Widespread wild fires
  • Acid rain (from release of SO2)
  • Darkness and intense cooling from blockage of
    sunlight reduced photosynthesis
  • Tsunami (up to 4 km high)
  • Severe earthquakes ?
  • Increased volcanism ?

32
Probability of extinction at the K-T boundary and
geographic range of marine bivalves (Jablonski
and Raup 1995)(Fig. 17.28)
Provinces are graphic regions that share similar
flora and fauna
33
Anthropogenic extinctions - 1
  • Between 1600 and 1993, humans observed extinction
    of 486 animal species and 600 plant species
    (Smith et al. 1993)
  • Most of these extinctions occurred in North
    America, the Caribbean, Australasia, and Pacific
    Islands
  • Currently, the taxa with the highest proportion
    of endangered species include
  • Palms 925 of 2,820 species (33)
  • Gymnosperms 242 of 758 species (32)
  • Birds 1,029 of 9,500 species (11)
  • Mammals 505 of 4,500 species (11)
  • Widespread habitat destruction is probably the
    greatest anthropogenic cause of extinction at
    present

34
Anthropogenic extinctions - 2
  • Pacific island birds
  • Steadman (1995) estimates 2,000 species have
    become extinct over last 2,000 years almost 20
    of all bird species
  • 60 endemic Hawaiian species extinct in last 1,500
    yr
  • 44 New Zealand species extinct since human
    colonization including 8 species of moas, the
    largest known birds
  • On the island of Eua only 6 of 27 land birds
    present before human occupation are still living

35
Exinction of forest birds on the island of Eua
(Tonga) (Jablonski and Steadman 1995)(Fig. 17.29)
36
Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon (Skole and
Tucker 1993) (Fig. 17.30)a. 1978b.
1988During this period of time the annual loss
of forested area was about 15,000 km2, an area
approximately equivalent to the state of
Connecticut per year
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