Scientists reveal why life got big in the Earth's early  oceans

By UCLA  Newsroom January 23, 2014 

 
Why did life forms first begin to get larger and what advantage did this  
increase in size provide? UCLA biologists working with an international team 
of  scientists examined the earliest communities of large multicellular 
organisms in  the fossil record to help answer this question.  

 
The life scientists used a novel application of modeling  techniques at a 
variety of scales to understand the scientific processes  operating in the 
deep sea 580 million years ago. The research reveals that an  increase in size 
provided access to nutrient-carrying ocean flow, giving an  advantage to 
multicellular eukaryotes that existed prior to the Cambrian  explosion of 
animal life, said David Jacobs, a professor of ecology and  evolutionary 
biology 
in the UCLA College of Letters and Science and senior  author of the 
research.  

 
The _study findings_ 
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982213015765)  are 
published Jan. 23 in the journal Current  Biology.  

 
A multidisciplinary research team reconstructed ocean flow in  the fossil 
community using "canopy flow models," a particular class of flow  models 
consistent with the dense spacing of organisms on the ancient seabed.  

 
The research was inspired by the NASA Astrobiology Institute's  
"Foundations of Complex Life" meeting in Newfoundland, Canada, where the oldest 
 known 
fossil communities of large, multicellular organisms — collectively called  
rangeomorphs — are found on rock surfaces exposed along the coast. These  
feather- or brush-shaped creatures ranged in size from several millimeters to  
tens of centimeters in height.  

 
The scientists addressed the absorption properties of the  rangeomorphs' 
surfaces based on the model's results. These rangeomorphs could  not 
photosynthesize because they lived in the extreme depths, where light did  not 
penetrate, Jacobs said. Their complex surfaces suggest that they absorbed  
dissolved nutrients directly from the water — which raises the question of how  
rangeomorphs competed with bacteria, which also specialize in absorbing  
nutrients from seawater.  

 
Understanding what advantages rangeomorphs gained over bacteria  by growing 
tall would provide scientists with insights into what drove the  evolution 
of the first communities of large life forms in the fossil record,  Jacobs 
said.  

 
The scientists discovered that rangeomorphs had an advantage  when they 
grew off the sea floor, as they were exposed to higher flow,  generating much 
greater "nutrient uptake."  

 
The inducement to "grow upwards is a function of the canopy,  which 
controls the velocity of ocean water as it moves through the rangeomorph  
community," Jacobs said. "As individuals grow upwards, the properties of water  
flow 
change, which promotes further upward growth."  

 
Both the canopy-flow and surface-uptake models represent  significant 
advances in scientists' ability to understand the ecology of  fossil and modern 
communities, Jacobs said. Such modeling may prove critical to  understanding 
processes that affect ocean life today, such as coral bleaching,  he  said.

















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