BSC 1011C
General Biology II
Dr. Graeme Lindbeck
glindbeck@valenciacollege.edu


Introduction To Animal Evolution

Outline

A. What is an animal?

  1. Structure, nutrition, and life history define animals
  2. The animal kingdom probably evolved from a colonial, flagellated protist

B. Two Views of Animal Diversity

  1. The remodeling of phylogenetic trees illustrates the process of scientific inquiry
  2. The traditional phylogenetic tree of animals is based mainly on grades in body "plans"
  3. Molecular systematists are moving some branches around on the phylogenetic tree of animals

C. The Origins of Animal Diversity

  1. Most animal phyla originated in a relatively brief span of geological time
  2. "Evo-devo" may clarify our understanding of the Cambrian diversification

Introduction

Animal life began in Precambrian seas with the evolution of multicellular forms that lived by eating other organisms.

Early animals populated the seas, fresh waters, and eventually the land.

A. What is an animal?

1. Structure, nutrition and life history define animals

While there are exceptions to nearly every criterion for distinguishing an animal from other life forms, five criteria, when taken together, create a reasonable definition.

  1. Animals are multicellular, heterotrophic eukaryotes.
  1. Animal cells lack cell walls that provide structural supports for plants and fungi.
  1. Animals have two unique types of tissues: nervous tissue for impulse conduction and muscle tissue for movement.
  1. Most animals reproduce sexually, with the diploid stage usually dominating the life cycle.
  1. The transformation of a zygote to an animal of specific form depends on the controlled expression in the developing embryo of special regulatory genes called Hox genes.

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2. The animal kingdom probably evolved from a colonial, flagellated protist

Most systematists now agree that the animal kingdom is monophyletic.

That ancestor was most likely a colonial flagellated protist that lived over 700 million years ago in the Precambrian era.

This protist was probably related to choanoflagellates, a group that arose about a billion years ago.

One hypothesis for origin of animals from a flagellated protist suggests that a colony of identical cells evolved into a hollow sphere.

The cells of this sphere then specialized, creating two or more layers of cells.

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B. Two Views of Animal Diversity

Zoologists recognize about 35 phyla of animals.

For the past century, there was broad consensus among systematists for the major branches of the animal phylogenetic tree.

However, the molecular systematics of the past decade is challenging some of these long-held ideas about the phylogenetic relationships among the animal phyla.

1. The remodeling of phylogenetic trees illustrates the process of scientific inquiry

It must be frustrating that the phylogenetic trees in textbooks cannot be memorized as fossilized truths.

On the other hand, the current revolution in systematics is a healthy reminder that science is both a process of inquiry and dynamic.

New hypotheses or refinements of old ones represent the latest versions of what we understand about nature based on the best available evidence.

Evidence is the key word because even our most cherished ideas in science are probationary.

A comparison of the traditional phylogenetic tree of animals with the remodeled tree based on molecular biology shows agreement on some issues and disagreement on others.

Though the new data from molecular systematics are compelling, the traditional view of animal phylogeny still offers some important advantages for helping us understand the diversity of animal body plans.

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2. The traditional phylogenetic tree of animals is based mainly on grades in body "plans"

The traditional view of relationships among animal phyla are based mainly on key characteristics of body plans and embryonic development.

Each major branch represents a grade, which is defined by certain body-plan features shared by the animals belonging to that branch.

The major grades are distinguished by structural changes at four deep branches.

  1. The first branch point splits the Parazoa which lack true tissues from the Eumetazoa which have true tissues.
  1. The eumetazoans are divided into two major branches, partly based on body symmetry.

Linked with bilateral symmetry is cephalization, an evolutionary trend toward the concentration of sensory equipment on the anterior end.

The symmetry of an animal generally fits its lifestyle.

The basic organization of germ layers, concentric layers of embryonic tissue that form various tissues and organs, differs between radiata and bilateria.

The radiata are said to be diploblastic because they have two germ layers.

The bilateria are triploblastic.

  1. The Bilateria can be divided by the presence or absence of a body cavity (a fluid-filled space separating the digestive tract from the outer body wall) and by the structure the body cavity.
  1. The coelomate phyla are divided into two grades based on differences in their development.

Many protostomes undergo spiral cleavage, in which planes of cell division are diagonal to the vertical axis of the embryo.

The zygotes of many deuterostomes undergo radial cleavage in which the cleavage planes are parallel or perpendicular to the vertical egg axis.

Coelom formation begins in the gastrula stage.

The third difference centers on the fate of the blastopore, the opening of the archenteron.

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3. Molecular systematists are moving some branches around on the phylogenetic tree of animals

Modern phylogenetic systematics is based on the identification of monophyletic clades.

The traditional phylogenetic tree of animals is based on the assumption that grades in body plan are good indicators of clades.

Molecular systematics has added a new set of shared-derived characters in the form of unique monomer sequences within certain genes and their products.

In some cases, the clades determined from molecular data reinforce the traditional animal tree based on comparative anatomy and development, but in other cases, a very different pattern emerges.

At key places, these two views of animal phylogeny are alike.

However, the traditional and molecular-based phylogenetic trees clash, especially on the protostome branch.

Traditional analyses have produced two competing hypotheses for the relationships among annelids, mollusks, and arthropods.

Traditionally, the acoleomate phylum Platyhelminthes (flatworms) branches from the tree before the formation of body cavities.

The molecular-based phylogeny splits the pseudoceolomates with the phylum Rotifera (rotifers) clustered with the lophotrochozoan phyla and the phylum Nematoda (nematodes) with the ecdysozoans.

The name Ecdysozoa (nematodes, arthropods, and other phyla) refers to animals that secrete external skeletons (exoskeleton).

In the traditional tree, the assignment of the three lophophorate phyla is problematic.

In summary, the molecular evidence recognizes two distinct clades within the protostomes and distributes the acoelomates, pseudocoelomates, and lophophorate phyla among these two clades.

Our survey of animal phyla is based on the newer molecular phylogeny, but there are two caveats.

First, the concept of body-plan grades still is a very useful way to think about the diversity of animal forms that have evolved.

Second, the molecular phylogeny is a hypothesis about the history of life, and is thus tentative.

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C. The Origins of Animal Diversity

1. Most animal phyla originated in a relatively brief span of geological time

The fossil record and molecular studies concur that the diversification that produced most animal phyla occurred rapidly on the vast scale of geologic time.

This lasted about 40 million years (about 565 to 525 million years ago) during the late Precambrian and early Cambrian (which began about 543 million years ago).

The strongest evidence for the initial appearance of multicellular animals is found in the the last period of the Precambrian era, the Ediacaran period.

Data from molecular systematics suggest an animal origin about a billion years ago.

Nearly all the major animal body plans appear in Cambrian rocks from 543 to 525 million years ago.

During this relatively short time, a burst of animal origins, the Cambrian explosion, left a rich fossil assemblage.

Some Cambrian fossils in the Burgess Shale in British Columbia and other sites in Greenland and China are rather bizarre-looking when compared to typical marine animals today.

On the scale of geologic time, animals diversified so rapidly that it is difficult from the fossil record to sort out the sequence of branching in animal phylogeny.

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2. "Evo-devo" may clarify our understanding of the Cambrian diversification

There are three main hypotheses for what caused the diversification of animals.

  1. Ecological causes: The emergence of predator-prey relationships led to a diversity of evolutionary adaptations, such as various kinds of protective shells and diverse modes of locomotion.
  2. Geological causes: Atmospheric oxygen may have finally reached high enough concentrations to support more active metabolism.
  3. Genetic causes: Much of the diversity in body form among animal phyla is associated with variations in the spatial and temporal expression of Hox genes within the embryo.

A reasonable hypothesis is that the diversification of animals was associated with the evolution of the Hox regulatory genes, which led to variation in morphology during development.

These three hypotheses are not mutually exclusive.

Some systematists studying animal phylogeny interpret the molecular data as supporting three Cambrian explosions, not just one.

For the three main branches of bilateral animals - Lophotrochozoa, Ecdysozoa, and Deuterostomia - the relationships among phyla within each are difficult to resolve, but the differences between these three clades are clear, based on their nucleic acid sequences.

By the end of the Cambrian radiation, the animal phyla were locked into developmental patterns that constrained evolution enough that no additional phyla evolved after that period.

In the last half-billion years, animal evolution has mainly generated new variations on old "designs".

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Dr. Graeme Lindbeck .