British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK.
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Glob Chang Biol. 2023 Jan;29(1):10-20. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16393. Epub 2022 Oct 11.
The timing of the first appearance of animals is of crucial importance for understanding the evolution of life on Earth. Although the fossil record places the earliest metazoans at 572-602 Ma, molecular clock studies suggest a far earlier origination, as far back as ~850 Ma. The difference in these dates would place the rise of animal life into a time period punctuated by multiple colossal, potentially global, glacial events. Although the two schools of thought debate the limitations of each other's methods, little time has been dedicated to how animal life might have survived if it did arise before or during these global glacial periods. The history of recent polar biota shows that organisms have found ways of persisting on and around the ice of the Antarctic continent throughout the Last Glacial Maximum (33-14 Ka), with some endemic species present before the breakup of Gondwana (180-23 Ma). Here we discuss the survival strategies and habitats of modern polar marine organisms in environments analogous to those that could have existed during Neoproterozoic glaciations. We discuss how, despite the apparent harshness of many ice covered, sub-zero, Antarctic marine habitats, animal life thrives on, in and under the ice. Ice dominated systems and processes make some local environments more habitable through water circulation, oxygenation, terrigenous nutrient input and novel habitats. We consider how the physical conditions of Neoproterozoic glaciations would likely have dramatically impacted conditions for potential life in the shallows and erased any possible fossil evidence from the continental shelves. The recent glacial cycle has driven the evolution of Antarctica's unique fauna by acting as a "diversity pump," and the same could be true for the late Proterozoic and the evolution of animal life on Earth, and the existence of life elsewhere in the universe on icy worlds or moons.
动物的首次出现时间对于理解地球上生命的演化至关重要。尽管化石记录将最早的后生动物置于 572-602Ma,但分子钟研究表明其起源要早得多,可追溯至约 850Ma。这些日期之间的差异将使动物生命的兴起置于一个由多次巨大的、可能是全球性的冰川事件所打断的时期。尽管这两种观点都在争论对方方法的局限性,但很少有人专门研究如果动物生命真的在这些全球性冰川时期之前或期间出现,它将如何生存。最近极地生物的历史表明,生物已经找到了在南极大陆冰上和周围生存的方法,在冈瓦纳大陆分裂之前(180-23Ma)就存在一些特有物种。在这里,我们讨论了现代极地海洋生物在类似于新元古代冰川作用期间可能存在的环境中的生存策略和栖息地。我们讨论了尽管许多覆盖着冰、零下温度的南极海洋栖息地表面看起来很恶劣,但动物生命是如何在冰上、冰中和冰下茁壮成长的。冰主导的系统和过程通过水循环、充氧、陆源营养物质输入和新栖息地,使一些局部环境更适合居住。我们考虑了新元古代冰川作用的物理条件将如何极大地影响浅海潜在生命的条件,并从大陆架上抹去任何可能的化石证据。最近的冰期循环通过充当“多样性泵”推动了南极洲独特动物群的进化,对于晚元古代和地球上动物生命的进化以及在冰冷世界或卫星上的宇宙其他地方的生命存在也是如此。