Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1

THE HiSToRy oF LiFE 441


share many genes that underlie cell and developmental processes [76], suggesting
that the genetic toolkit of animals evolved during the Ediacaran period (635–541
Mya) [28, 49]. Among living animals (Metazoa), sponges (phylum Porifera) are
thought by many researchers to be the sister group of the other animals, although
the relationships among the sponges, the radially symmetrical Cnidaria (jelly-
fishes, corals), the Ctenophora (comb jellies), and the Bilateria are still uncertain
[25]. The Bilateria—bilaterally symmetrical animals with a head, often equipped
with mouth appendages, sensory organs, and a brain—include all the other ani-
mal phyla. The origin of all these phyla is one of the biggest unsolved problems in
the study of evolution.
The final two periods of the Proterozoic are the Cryogenian (720–635 Mya),
when Earth experienced lowered temperatures, and the Ediacaran. From about 575
to 541 Mya, there are fossils of a variety of enigmatic animals known as the Edia-
caran fauna. Most of them were soft-bodied and appear to have been flat creatures
that crept or stood on the sea floor (FIGURE 17.7). They are thought to have become
extinct without leaving any post-Cambrian descendants. Ediacaran animals seem to
have lacked features, such as mouthparts or locomotory appendages, that might be
used in interacting with other animals, and they left no burrows in sediments. Nor
did the bilaterians that are thought to have existed at this time. Based on calibrated
DNA sequence divergence, the phyla of living animals stem from a common ancestor

FIGURE 17.7 Members of the
Ediacaran fauna. (A) Tribrachidium
heraldicum. The triradial form of
this animal differs from that of
any Phanerozoic animals. (B) The
relationship of the wormlike Dick-
insonia costata to later animals is
unknown.

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_1707.ai Date 11-02-2016

(A) (B)

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_17.06.ai Date 12-31-2016

(A)
Choanocyte

(B)

FIGURE 17.6 (A) Choanoflagellates are
unicellular eukaryotes that can form simple
colonies. They are the closest known rela-
tives of animals, and structurally resemble
(B) choanocyte cells of sponges. (B, photo
from [23b].)

17_EVOL4E_CH17.indd 441 3/22/17 1:36 PM

Free download pdf