The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history

After a full century of search, evidence of Darwin’s “missing” pre-Cambrian fossil record was finally discovered in the mid-1950s. Unsurprisingly, given the then widely held belief that Precambrian life was not only unknown but unknowable, the initial report engendered widespread skepticism. Neverth...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: J. William Schopf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-09-01
Series:Earth History and Biodiversity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950475924000054
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849344263066746880
author J. William Schopf
author_facet J. William Schopf
author_sort J. William Schopf
collection DOAJ
description After a full century of search, evidence of Darwin’s “missing” pre-Cambrian fossil record was finally discovered in the mid-1950s. Unsurprisingly, given the then widely held belief that Precambrian life was not only unknown but unknowable, the initial report engendered widespread skepticism. Nevertheless, new finds soon followed, discoveries that set the science on its present course by establishing the role of O2-producing phototrophic cyanobacteria as prime components of the Precambrian biota. Remarkably, however, many of the newly found ancient specimens were all but indistinguishable from cyanobacteria living today, a similarity that although bolstering their interpretation as authentic fossils raised questions about their apparent lack of evolutionary change. As the Precambrian fossil record has become increasingly better documented over recent decades, the seeming identity of modern and fossil cyanobacterial taxa has been repeatedly confirmed by workers worldwide. To accommodate these extraordinarily long-lived taxa, a new category of evolutionary rate-distribution, hypobradytely, has been added to G.G. Simpson’s classic listing and a second group of hypobradytelic Precambrian organisms, the microbial components of sulfuretum biocoenoses, has been discovered. Both of these groups originated early in earth history, the origin of O2-producing cyanobacteria ∼2700 Ma ago producing an enormous upheaval of the world’s ecosystem -- the microbial cataclysm -- as they supplanted long-established oxygen-intolerant anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria to become the predominant primary producers, the fundament of the global ecosystem. At least three principal characteristics of these early-evolved hypobradytelic prokaryotes, both cyanobacteria and sulfuretum bacteria, have contributed to their striking differences in tempo and mode of evolution from those of the later-evolved Phanerozoic biota: (1) Their lack of outgroup biotic competition; (2) their within-group competition-minimizing ecologic preferences; and (3) their phenotype variability-limiting asexual mode of reproduction. Clearly, both the tempo and mode of evolution evolved as the cyanobacterially induced microbial cataclysm forever changed life’s history.
format Article
id doaj-art-8b22896c443649b2a272b0fb56ef8fe7
institution Kabale University
issn 2950-4759
language English
publishDate 2024-09-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Earth History and Biodiversity
spelling doaj-art-8b22896c443649b2a272b0fb56ef8fe72025-08-20T03:42:43ZengElsevierEarth History and Biodiversity2950-47592024-09-01110000510.1016/j.hisbio.2024.100005The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s historyJ. William Schopf0Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USAAfter a full century of search, evidence of Darwin’s “missing” pre-Cambrian fossil record was finally discovered in the mid-1950s. Unsurprisingly, given the then widely held belief that Precambrian life was not only unknown but unknowable, the initial report engendered widespread skepticism. Nevertheless, new finds soon followed, discoveries that set the science on its present course by establishing the role of O2-producing phototrophic cyanobacteria as prime components of the Precambrian biota. Remarkably, however, many of the newly found ancient specimens were all but indistinguishable from cyanobacteria living today, a similarity that although bolstering their interpretation as authentic fossils raised questions about their apparent lack of evolutionary change. As the Precambrian fossil record has become increasingly better documented over recent decades, the seeming identity of modern and fossil cyanobacterial taxa has been repeatedly confirmed by workers worldwide. To accommodate these extraordinarily long-lived taxa, a new category of evolutionary rate-distribution, hypobradytely, has been added to G.G. Simpson’s classic listing and a second group of hypobradytelic Precambrian organisms, the microbial components of sulfuretum biocoenoses, has been discovered. Both of these groups originated early in earth history, the origin of O2-producing cyanobacteria ∼2700 Ma ago producing an enormous upheaval of the world’s ecosystem -- the microbial cataclysm -- as they supplanted long-established oxygen-intolerant anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria to become the predominant primary producers, the fundament of the global ecosystem. At least three principal characteristics of these early-evolved hypobradytelic prokaryotes, both cyanobacteria and sulfuretum bacteria, have contributed to their striking differences in tempo and mode of evolution from those of the later-evolved Phanerozoic biota: (1) Their lack of outgroup biotic competition; (2) their within-group competition-minimizing ecologic preferences; and (3) their phenotype variability-limiting asexual mode of reproduction. Clearly, both the tempo and mode of evolution evolved as the cyanobacterially induced microbial cataclysm forever changed life’s history.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950475924000054AerobiosisArchaeaCyanobacteriaHypobradytelyStromatoliteSulfuretum
spellingShingle J. William Schopf
The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history
Earth History and Biodiversity
Aerobiosis
Archaea
Cyanobacteria
Hypobradytely
Stromatolite
Sulfuretum
title The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history
title_full The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history
title_fullStr The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history
title_full_unstemmed The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history
title_short The microbial cataclysm that forever changed life’s history
title_sort microbial cataclysm that forever changed life s history
topic Aerobiosis
Archaea
Cyanobacteria
Hypobradytely
Stromatolite
Sulfuretum
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950475924000054
work_keys_str_mv AT jwilliamschopf themicrobialcataclysmthatforeverchangedlifeshistory
AT jwilliamschopf microbialcataclysmthatforeverchangedlifeshistory