zuz
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- TL;DR
- Which came first
Which appeared first on Earth, animals or plants? Also, which appeared on land first?
The discussion centers on the evolutionary timeline of life on Earth, specifically the emergence of plants and animals. Prokaryotic cells, including bacteria and archaea, were the first forms of life, followed by eukaryotic cells over a billion years later. Evidence suggests that plants likely evolved before animals, particularly on land, as they provided essential resources for terrestrial life. The Ordovician period is highlighted as a critical time for the appearance of fungi, animals, and plants, though the exact sequence remains unresolved due to overlapping fossil records and environmental conditions.
PREREQUISITESBiologists, paleontologists, evolutionary scientists, and anyone interested in the origins of life and the evolutionary relationships among different kingdoms of organisms.
Protista (the single-celled eukaryotes -- means they have more modern cells -- like amoeba)
Fungi (fungus and related organisms like mushrooms)
Plantae (the plants like tulips and ferns)
Animalia (the animals like lions and birds)
Monera (the prokaryotes like bacteria).
Monera ->
Protista ->
Animalia
Fungi
Plantae
Good job! My takeaway is putting things into classifications has problems. And then assuming where they fit follows suit. So who came first is not a trivial question. I thought I was saying that. Apparently not.Although I must point out that the most convincing evidences for fungi, animals and plants on land are chronologically very close, during the Ordovician. So for the moment this is quite an unresolved question.
Interesting to think this one through:zuz said:Summary:: Which came first
Which appeared first on Earth, animals or plants? Also, which appeared on land first?