The evolutionary consequences of oxygenic photosynthesis: a body size perspective

被引:0
|
作者
Jonathan L. Payne
Craig R. McClain
Alison G. Boyer
James H. Brown
Seth Finnegan
Michał Kowalewski
Richard A. Krause
S. Kathleen Lyons
Daniel W. McShea
Philip M. Novack-Gottshall
Felisa A. Smith
Paula Spaeth
Jennifer A. Stempien
Steve C. Wang
机构
[1] Stanford University,Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences
[2] National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent),Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[3] Yale University,Department of Biology
[4] University of New Mexico,Department of Geosciences
[5] Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University,Department of Geology and Geophysics
[6] Yale University,Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History
[7] Smithsonian Institution,Department of Biology
[8] Duke University,Department of Biological Sciences
[9] Benedictine University,Natural Resources Department
[10] Northland College,Department of Geology
[11] Washington and Lee University,Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences
[12] Department of Mathematics and Statistics,undefined
[13] Swarthmore College,undefined
[14] California Institute of Technology,undefined
来源
Photosynthesis Research | 2011年 / 107卷
关键词
Body size; Oxygen; Evolution; Precambrian; Maximum size; Optimum size;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The high concentration of molecular oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere is arguably the most conspicuous and geologically important signature of life. Earth’s early atmosphere lacked oxygen; accumulation began after the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis in cyanobacteria around 3.0–2.5 billion years ago (Gya). Concentrations of oxygen have since varied, first reaching near-modern values ~600 million years ago (Mya). These fluctuations have been hypothesized to constrain many biological patterns, among them the evolution of body size. Here, we review the state of knowledge relating oxygen availability to body size. Laboratory studies increasingly illuminate the mechanisms by which organisms can adapt physiologically to the variation in oxygen availability, but the extent to which these findings can be extrapolated to evolutionary timescales remains poorly understood. Experiments confirm that animal size is limited by experimental hypoxia, but show that plant vegetative growth is enhanced due to reduced photorespiration at lower O2:CO2. Field studies of size distributions across extant higher taxa and individual species in the modern provide qualitative support for a correlation between animal and protist size and oxygen availability, but few allow prediction of maximum or mean size from oxygen concentrations in unstudied regions. There is qualitative support for a link between oxygen availability and body size from the fossil record of protists and animals, but there have been few quantitative analyses confirming or refuting this impression. As oxygen transport limits the thickness or volume-to-surface area ratio—rather than mass or volume—predictions of maximum possible size cannot be constructed simply from metabolic rate and oxygen availability. Thus, it remains difficult to confirm that the largest representatives of fossil or living taxa are limited by oxygen transport rather than other factors. Despite the challenges of integrating findings from experiments on model organisms, comparative observations across living species, and fossil specimens spanning millions to billions of years, numerous tractable avenues of research could greatly improve quantitative constraints on the role of oxygen in the macroevolutionary history of organismal size.
引用
收藏
页码:37 / 57
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Body plan of turtles: an anatomical, developmental and evolutionary perspective
    Nagashima, Hiroshi
    Kuraku, Shigehiro
    Uchida, Katsuhisa
    Kawashima-Ohya, Yoshie
    Narita, Yuichi
    Kuratani, Shigeru
    ANATOMICAL SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2012, 87 (01) : 1 - 13
  • [32] Demographic consequences of changing body size in a terrestrial salamander
    Hernandez-Pacheco, Raisa
    Plard, Floriane
    Grayson, Kristine L.
    Steiner, Ulrich K.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 11 (01): : 174 - 185
  • [33] The trouble with oxygen: The ecophysiology of extant phototrophs and implications for the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis
    Hamilton, Trinity L.
    FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2019, 140 : 233 - 249
  • [34] Geological evidence of oxygenic photosynthesis and the biotic response to the 2400-2200 Ma "Great Oxidation Event"
    Schopf, J. William
    BIOCHEMISTRY-MOSCOW, 2014, 79 (03) : 165 - 177
  • [35] Ecological Consequences Of Sexually Selected Traits: An Eco-Evolutionary Perspective
    Giery, Sean T.
    Layman, Craig A.
    QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BIOLOGY, 2019, 94 (01) : 29 - 74
  • [36] A REVIEW OF SOME PHYSIOLOGICAL AND EVOLUTIONARY ASPECTS OF BODY SIZE AND BUD SIZE OF HYDRA
    SLOBODKIN, LB
    BOSSERT, P
    MATESSI, C
    GATTO, M
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1991, 216 : 377 - 382
  • [37] Evolutionary implications of the relationship between genome size and body size in flatworms and copepods
    T Ryan Gregory
    Paul D N Hebert
    Jurek Kolasa
    Heredity, 2000, 84 : 201 - 208
  • [38] Evolutionary implications of the relationship between genome size and body size in flatworms and copepods
    Gregory, TR
    Hebert, PDN
    Kolasa, J
    HEREDITY, 2000, 84 (02) : 201 - 208
  • [39] Body size and clonality consequences for sexual reproduction in a perennial herb of Brazilian rupestrian grasslands
    Demetrio, G. R.
    Coelho, F. F.
    Barbosa, M. E. A.
    BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY, 2014, 74 (03) : 744 - 749
  • [40] Pollinator size and its consequences: Robust estimates of body size in pollinating insects
    Kendall, Liam K.
    Rader, Romina
    Gagic, Vesna
    Cariveau, Daniel P.
    Albrecht, Matthias
    Baldock, Katherine C. R.
    Freitas, Breno M.
    Hall, Mark
    Holzschuh, Andrea
    Molina, Francisco P.
    Morten, Joanne M.
    Pereira, Janaely S.
    Portman, Zachary M.
    Roberts, Stuart P. M.
    Rodriguez, Juanita
    Russo, Laura
    Sutter, Louis
    Vereecken, Nicolas J.
    Bartomeus, Ignasi
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2019, 9 (04): : 1702 - 1714