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Discovery of grape-sized organisms in deep sea provides new insight on animal evolution

Washington, Fri, 21 Nov 2008 ANI
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Washington, Nov 21 (ANI): Biologists have discovered giant deep-sea single-celled organisms called protists in the ocean near the Bahamas, which could lead to new insights into the evolutionary origin of animals.

 

The grape-sized protists and their complex groove-like tracks on the ocean floor near the Bahamas were found by biologist Mikhail Matz from The University of Texas at Austin, and his colleagues.

 

This is the first time a single-celled organism has been shown to make such animal-like traces.

 

The finding is significant, because similar fossil grooves and furrows found from the Precambrian era, as early as 1.8 billion years ago, have always been attributed to early evolving multicellular animals.

 

"If our giant protists were alive 600 million years ago and the track was fossilized, a paleontologist unearthing it today would without a shade of doubt attribute it to a kind of large, multicellular, bilaterally symmetrical animal," said Matz. "We now have to rethink the fossil record," he added.

 

Most animals, from humans to insects, are bilaterally symmetrical, meaning that they can be roughly divided into halves that are mirror images.

 

The bilateral animals appeared in the fossil record in the early Cambrian about 542 million years ago, quickly diversifying into all of the major animal groups, or phyla, still alive today.

 

This rapid diversification, known as the Cambrian explosion, puzzled Charles Darwin and remains one of the biggest questions in animal evolution to this day.

 

Very few fossils exist of organisms that could be the Precambrian ancestors of bilateral animals, and even those are highly controversial.

 

Fossil traces are the most accepted evidence of the existence of these proto-animals.

 

"We used to think that it takes bilateral symmetry to move in one direction across the seafloor and thereby leave a track," explained Matz.

 

"You have to have a belly and a backside and a front and back end. Now, we show that protists can leave traces of comparable complexity and with a very similar profile," he added.

 

With their find, Matz and his colleagues argue that fossil traces cannot be used alone as evidence that multicellular animals were evolving during the Precambrian, slowly setting the stage for the Cambrian explosion.

 

"I personally think now that the whole Precambrian may have been exclusively the reign of protists," said Matz. "Our observations open up this possible way of interpreting the Precambrian fossil record," he added.

 

According to Matz, the giant protists' bubble-like body design is probably one of the planet's oldest macroscopic body designs, which may have existed for 1.8 billion years.

 

"Our guys may be the ultimate living fossils of the macroscopic world," he said. (ANI)

 

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