News on Exobiology
- Will we ever find life somewhere?
- Organics formes easy in new planetary systems
- Building blocks of life generates naturally in comets
- Super-Earth unlikely able to transfer life to other planets
- New online SETILive service
- ESO finds life in space - on Earth
- Amoeba may offer key clue to photosynthetic evolution
- SETI-search focuses on Kepler-planets
- Earths atmosphere was NOT Methane-dominated
- Alien spaceprobes gone unnoticed?
- Exoligths could reveal alien civilisations
- "Sweet spots" for complex organic molecules
- Space is filled with conplex organic molecules
- Discovery of extreme amoeba
- Life threatening interstellar events
- Living in the galactic danger zone
- Alien life more likely on desert-planets
- Life from Earth caould have seeded the entire galaxy
- Doplhin-communication ideal for interstellar talk
- DNA building-blocks from space
- Meteorites may hold a toolkit for creating life
- How to find life in the Universe
- Asteroid served as "custom orders" of life-ingredients
- Evolution from microbes to mobile life
- SETI focuses on 86 Earthlike planets
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Evolution from microbes to mobile life
Thursday, 19 May 2011 12:51
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| Astronomy - Exobiology / SETI |
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The evolution of the first bacteria is not that hard to comprehend. But how did they evovle to higher organisms? Scientists may now have found the answer to this question in larvae that imitates microbe-mattes Complex animals first evolved during the Ediacaran period, between 635 and 542 million years ago, when the oceans were just becoming fully oxygenated. In situ fossils of the mobile forms of these animals are associated with microbial sedimentary structures, and the animal’s trace fossils generally were formed parallel to the surface of the seabed, at or below the sediment–water interface. This evidence suggests the earliest mobile animals inhabited settings with high microbial populations, and may have mined microbially bound sediments for food resources The scientists report the association of mobile animals—insect larvae, oligochaetes and burrowing shore crabs - with microbial mats in a modern hypersaline lagoon in Venezuela. The lagoon is characterized by low concentrations of dissolved O2 and pervasive biomats dominated by oxygen-producing cyanobacteria, both analogous to conditions during the Ediacaran. We find that, during the day, O2 levels in the biomats are four times higher than in the overlying water column. We therefore conclude that the animals harvest both food and O2 from the biomats. In doing so, the animals produce horizontal burrows similar to those found in Ediacaran-aged rocks. The scientists suggest that early mobile animals may have evolved in similar environments during the Ediacaran, effectively exploiting oases rich in O2 that formed within low oxygen settings. Source: Nature |




