Originally posted by Jack
How did single celled orgainsims evolve into multicelular organisms because I just can't imagine them making that step. Evolution is due to mutations in organisms that makes them better at survival but how could such a large mutation have occured?
Also, does anyone know what they evolved into?
this is one of the all-time most interesting questions
I have no hard info for you, only that I share the curiosity
I've read that fossil evidence shows it happened around 600 million years ago
Like...in extremely crude terms singlecell began 3.6 billion and went on being single cell for 3 billion years (!) and then got
the idea Hey why don't we try cooperating! and...
A few years back I read an article by a "Snowball Earth" theorist who tried to argue from some geological evidence that 600 or 700 years ago there was a runaway freeze that completely froze the oceans. Go figure.
This runaway freeze created a high albedo so very little solar energy stuck to the Earth and so the iceball was stable
And the freezeover caused a mass extinction
(apparently there was one of those mass extinctions 600 or 700 million years ago, a major one)
And this mass extinction somehow triggered multicell life maybe by forcing cells to clump together for survival and clearing out a lot of ecological niches so that evolution could radiate and proceed rapidly when the ice finally melted.
Probably this "Snowball Earth" theory is unacceptable for some reason. most theories get shot down. but I thought it was cute.
Why, you may ask, did the ice eventually melt? because of
volcanos gradually building up CO2!
There wasnt much photosynthesis so the greenhouse gasses just stayed in the atmosphere until the greenhouse effect was so overwhelming that even despite the high albedo the ice melted.
Am I telling you old stuff? Did you know of this theory already?
BTW I have no trouble picturing the actual step itself because lots of singlecells form colonies that actually involve cooperation.
like mold, and lichen on rock, and plaque on your teeth and all that stuff. they work collectively to change the chemistry and even geometry around them to their collective benefit, and cooperate to build up spore spreading structures and send out filaments and all that.
so an active colony is not all that different from say a sponge, or coelenerate or jellyfish
which is also a sort of coalition of single cells.
the thing that is hard for me to imagine is how did we get stuck on the one-cell level (with singlecells occupying all the ecological niches) for almost 3 billion years?
and if that was so obviously stable, then what finally changed? how can there have been no decisive evolutionary advantage to coalescence for 3 billion years and then suddenly a very big
evolution-driving reproductive/survival advantage?