Thursday, June 10, 2010
Exploding the Cambrian
By studying Darwin's finches and East African cichlids, scientists can get clues that help them understand much older, much bigger adaptive radiations. One of the biggest was the early rise of animals. This period of animal evolution is sometimes nicknamed "the Cambrian explosion." Unfortunately, that name gives the impression that all the modern groups of animals popped into existence 540 million years ago at the dawn of the Cambrian period. Animals evolved from protozoans, which left fossils over a billion years before the Cambrian. Some 630 million years ago, one group of living animals—sponges—was already leaving behind biomarkers. By 555 million years ago, fossils belonging to some living groups began to appear—12 million years before the Cambrian Period.
The phylogeny of early animals is also showing how the body plans of living animals emerged not in a single leap, but in a series of steps. Arthropods, for example, have a body plan with a combination of traits (such as segments and an exoskeleton) seen in no other group of living animals. But some Cambrian fossils had some of those traits and not others. ...
Clearly, then, animals did not drop to Earth in the Cambrian Period. They evolved. Nevertheless, the fossil record of the Cambrian chronicles a remarkable pulse of rapid evolution. When paleontologists look at 530-million-year-old rocks, they mainly find small, shell-like fossils. When they look at rocks just 20 million years younger, they find fossils that are recognizable relatives of living arthropods, vertebrates, and many other major groups of animals.
Carl Zimmer, The Tangled Bank: An Introduction to Evolution
20 million years. Let's see. For the critters under consideration, that's likely on the order of 20 million to 40 million generations. That's a loooooog time in evolutionary terms.
The human/chimp split was on the order of 300K to 400K generations ago, so the Cambrian "explosion" took ~90 times longer in generations terms than the evolution of Homo saps from our common ancestor with chimps.
Try Graham Budd's paper for background and references, and Ramskold and Hou's paper for an example.
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