How Did Life Recover From The First Mass Extinction?

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[Music] fires rage for thousands of kilometers they spread across the landscape consuming grasslands and fern forests alike ahead of these relentless blazes life large and small flees in thundering herds or scattered and dropping from the air desperately screeching alarm an eerie permanent twilight claims the sky thick with dust without the heat from the sun temperatures plummet and the global winter descends freezing solid the lush forests that escape the burn and depriving the remaining food chains of the vegetation they need to survive this is the kt extinction event aftermath of a catastrophic asteroid impact that left a crater 150 kilometers wide and deep enough to contain mount everest twice over from this millennia-long night there would be no dawn for the dinosaurs life hangs by a thread [Music] when the dust finally clears and the sun shines once again it does so on a largely empty world with the big dinosaurs gone only the hardy scavengers and survivalists are left some dinosaurs did make it through those for example that could eat tough long-lasting nuts and seeds or which had a soft fluffy down to protect them from the cold scavenging mammals too clung on who we used to scraping through on short measures it's a scorched battered frozen post-apocalyptic landscape but for them it's a world of opportunity suddenly in little more than the blink of an eye the predators are gone the competition is wiped out and the resources of the entire globe are theirs for the taking with the deadly hunting pterosaurs now gone the skies no longer threaten sudden swooping death so the fluffy nut-eaters can roam and climb in safety they can even learn to fly themselves without danger from above eventually their fluff evolves to feathers and their beaks are specialized to their food source of choice they become the wildly successful avs birds of which there are tens of thousands of species flying running and even swimming all over the globe meanwhile the mammals once very much the underdog in a world ruled by terrible lizards now have the run of an empty home as the plants of the plains and forests grow back without competition they have the pick of the crop they can eat more grow larger change their lifestyles to nurture their young rather than endlessly looking for food there is now more than enough energy available for the mammals to support carnivores and even apex predators they expand into habitats all over the globe wherever food is to be found even into the oceans in the few million years after the kt extinction mammals diversified more than in the preceding 160 million years but of course this was not the first time a catastrophic event had revolutionized life on the planet some two billion years earlier the great oxidation event the largest extinction of all time brought life to the brink and when it bounced back it too was fundamentally transformed indeed without the first extinction life may never have made it beyond simple bacteria at all [Music] before the kt extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs before even the end permian extinction known as the great dying there was another mass extinction that almost wiped out all life on earth around two and a half billion years ago at the fringes of thriving microbial communities some groups had evolved to use photosynthesis instead of chemistry to acquire their energy these new photosynthesizers could colonize everything the light touched but the gift of photosynthesis came with an unwanted by-product oxygen which in the archaean ocean was as lethal as mustard gas deadly oxygen had filled the oceans and then the air the reactive element poisoned everything in its path and then transformed the atmosphere stripping it of its insulating blanket of methane and plunging the planet into an ice age for 300 million years thick ice extended from the pole to the equator and along the shallow shorelines photosynthesizers died in their droves the architects of their own destruction [Music] but we know that this wasn't the end of life on earth our very existence on the surface of the planet today is testament to life's tenacity through the most catastrophic events indeed the vast majority of our ecosystems today rely on the very photosynthesis that brought about such destruction life clung on by the thinnest of threads just one percent of all life in arcane oceans persisted into the next age the proterozoic and it's from this one percent that the living world was rebuilt after the dinosaur decimating kt extinction the dust cleared on an empty world and so too after the great oxygen extinction the one percent of life that survived did so in isolated refugia perhaps where volcanoes punched through the ice like in iceland today the warmth of magma so near the surface maintained shallow water oasis in the midst of a vast ice desert small communities of photosynthesizing bacteria could cling on here in their own lonely worlds some more ancient bacteria survived too the anaerobes still feeding off hydrothermal minerals in deep dark ocean crevices as yet untouched by the toxic oxygenated waters unaffected by the persistent darkness perhaps for them the great oxygen extinction and ensuing ice age had passed by unnoticed as long as tectonic forces maintained their supply of volcanic minerals and the poison gas didn't reach them it was business as usual for these ancient chemotrophic bacteria these isolated communities persisted where they could and the volcanic activity that helped keep them alive also helped bring the ice age to an end untroubled by the rise and fall of bacterial civilizations at their feet volcanoes continued to erupt explode and effuse carbon dioxide into the atmosphere gradually an insulating layer of this greenhouse gas built up and the atmosphere could once again trap heat and warm the surface eventually after a seemingly unshakeable winter the ice receded patches of blue ocean emerged and grew and the warmth they absorbed helped to chase the ice back to the poles [Music] the surviving life forms witnessed as the planet uncleared itself casting off the chains that had gripped it for so long they emerged from their tiny warm oases into oceans of untapped riches but these oceans were empty just as the post-dinosaur diorama would be only the lucky few remained to enjoy the spoils of this post-apocalyptic world for those that had already survived the worst this empty world was a gift of opportunity it took little time for the shallows to become colonized once more as the ice melted sea levels rose drowning the shorelines of every tiny island and making brand new habitats for opportunistic sun loving microbes photosynthesis was still an ideal source of energy since it required only the inexhaustible glow of the sun and ubiquitous carbon dioxide and as is the natural way of things microbial predators evolved too to take advantage of the energy captured by the producing photosynthesizers instead of capturing the sun's energy themselves they consumed the green producers and extracted the energy contained within their organic structures but with such riches in store and an entire planet as their playground the survivors had the chance to innovate further just as the fluffy feathered dinosaurs learned to fly in the safety of a rich empty world so too could the microbial survivors figuratively spread their wings in the late 19th century imperial germany is a hotbed of science and innovation young inquiring minds are drawn to the university of bonn in the west of the empire palatial buildings scattered along the banks of the rhine set in expansive grounds each home to a dedicated institute and hundreds of focused scholars in a small overfilled office in a corner of one such institute a finely dressed young man adjusts the gas lamp on his desk pulling it closer to the microscope before him the man's name is andreas schimper and he is a phyto-geographer tasked with understanding the distribution of plants all over the globe although on this evening in 1883 his mind is troubled by revelations more microscopic in nature shimpa is an adventuring naturalist like so many of the men in his family at the tender age of 27 he has already taken steamships across the atlantic to venezuela and the west indies traveling to the corners of the globe in the late 19th century was a thrilling and dangerous affair and andreas schimper has a taste for botanical adventure his exploration and research will give rise to the term tropical rainforest and many species of plant will come to be named in his honor but andreas believes that to truly understand the nature of an exotic plant one must study it at the smallest possible scale and so he spends hour upon hour pouring over paper-thin slices of his specimens staring at their box-like cells and the green speckled chloroblasts inside them he sees this same fundamental organization in every green leaf he places beneath the objective whether lovingly returned from the venezuelan jungle or plucked from the lawns of his own institute chloroplasts and their surrounding cells each distinct but their fates inextricably intertwined did this come to be shimper has a theory but it's almost too outrageous to consider he pauses with his pen hovering above the paper and slowly begins to write [Music] back in the proterozoic ocean playground life is rosy for the photosynthesizing bacteria they have resources in abundance and all the resistances they need to survive in this brave new oxygenated world but other survivors of the great oxygen extinction are still struggling anaerobic bacteria still shrink from the damaging reactive oxygen and are still dependent on the chemical energy sources that have supported them for the last billion years perhaps gene transfer could have been their savior once the same gene transfer that allowed the knowledge of photosynthetic pathways to be shared among microbial communities at the beginning of the great oxygenation but these anaerobes have been separated from their oxygen loving sisters for hundreds of millions of years and the rift is too wide to be crossed by genetic trading alone but that's not to say that they can't benefit from each other in a different way in the bountiful world of the proterozoic these two disparate groups do something extraordinary they cooperate cooperation in the living world is commonplace today if you know where to look on the african plains small dowdy birds spend their days perching around and often on the large game that roam the savannah they are ox pickers and the clue to their lifestyle is in their name they live among rhinoceroses zebra and other large mammals and feast almost exclusively off the insects they find on the mammal's backs in this way the birds get an easy meal and perform near constant pest control in return this kind of symbiosis where both parties benefit in some way occurs time and time again in the animal kingdom coteries of cleaner fish hover around the bellies and open mouths of deadly sharks eating dead skin parasites and cast off food the service they provide renders them immune to the shark's attention and they are protected in turn by their ferocious patrons mutualism even extends between animals and plants as flowers adapt to attract insect pollinators producing sweet nectar to draw them in and using them to spread their sex cells to every other flower the insect may visit the symbiosis between bacteria the dawn of the proterozoic was a springboard for survival in the brave new oxygenated world but its origins are somewhat sinister in the basic food chains of the microbial past some anaerobes acquire their energy from the organic molecules of their oxygen-loving cousins they engulf them whole swallowing them as a snake might consume an entire deer to digest it slowly over many days but in a one in a billion chance occasionally the prey isn't digested but continues to live on inside the predator's cells the predator doesn't get the nutrition from the meal it swallowed but it gets something even better the fruits of its praise ongoing labor in a sense the consumer has enslaved its prey inside itself keeping it captive and taking some of the energy it releases for its own but the relationship isn't so one-sided although it may seem like a diminished existence the prey microbe actually has been transported into a life of luxury protected from environmental stress and the threat of further predation the bacteria that lives inside another is infinitely richer than one struggling along in the outside world this is the most intimate of symbiotic relationships and eventually they even learn to grow and reproduce together soon this so-called endosymbiotic relationship becomes a permanent one with the two irreversibly reliant on one another indeed this relationship persists to this day in practically every cell of our own bodies the engulfed bacteria have become our mitochondria the powerhouses of our cells which take the sugars we eat and break them down to release energy for our metabolism our mitochondria even still retain some of their original dna distinct from the dna of the cells themselves but endosymbiosis was such a successful trick that proterozoic cells found use for it a second time the newly paired endosymbiotes could now break down organic matter in an oxygen-rich environment allowing them to quickly rise to dominance throughout the oceans a second pairing between these new dominant chimeras and successful photosynthesizing cyanobacteria changed the playing field once again through the same process of engulfing preserving and protecting the endosymbiotes acquired the cyanobacteria's ability to capture the sun's energy to make their own organic matter with this new relationship the trinity transcended the cell could survive anywhere on any food source or on the sun's light alone the photosynthesizing endosymbiotes become the chloroplasts the photosynthesizing organs in the green cells of algae and plants today [Music] this was the revelation that the phyto-geographer andreas schimper had in bonn in 1883 he had little evidence beyond the ubiquity and likeness of chloroplasts in plants from around the world but their resemblance to tiny free-living cyanobacteria was too great to go unnoticed yet this was outrageously new thinking indeed charles darwin's concepts of evolution were still controversial and hotly debated amongst natural scientists of the time he opted for a tentative footnote writing of the chloroplasts he saw their relationship with the organism containing them would somewhat suggest a symbiosis his ideas were pursued by scientists throughout the 20th century and endosymbiosis is now widely accepted as the origin of an entire domain of life the eukaryotes all plants animals and fungi are eukaryotes and are made from an entirely different kind of cell to the bacteria that ruled the archaean oceans they contain the mitochondria and chloroplasts of the original symbiosis but also a self-contained nucleus and other cellular machinery to help streamline an increasingly complex existence it's likely that only an event as catastrophic as the great oxygen extinction could have created the unique conditions to allow this remarkable transformation to happen and create complex cells capable of supporting the next stage of evolution on earth [Music] some 100 years before andreas schimper sat musing over the chloroplasts in exotic plants another naturalist was putting pen to paper to express his own novel thoughts on botanical matters his name was erasmus darwin and he was grandfathered to charles darwin a talented medical man from a wealthy english family erasmus spent much of his life working as a physician in litchfield england but he was a natural philosopher and a poet at heart choosing to express his ideas through elegant verse and florid prose so it was that in 1789 erasmus darwin penned a poem called the loves of the plants which personified the parts of a flower specialized for sexual reproduction as an amorous bride and groom but erasmus also uses the poem to put voice to his own views on the purposes of sex in the plant kingdom he asserts that the romance between flower bride and groom the joining of pollen and egg after successful pollination is the very thing that creates new types of living thing and is the source of evolution and of progress erasmus darwin was among the first to consider sex and evolution together and unwittingly hinted at a process whose genesis lay two billion years deeper in time the empty world following the great oxygen extinction laid the foundation for the emergence of eukaryotes but the newly oxygenated proterozoic earth was no paradise although the archaic bacteria had largely evolved a resistance to reactive oxygen neither bacteria or novel eukaryotes were entirely immune in fact 2 billion years later even we are not immune to its slow chemical attack oxygen inside the cell gradually attacks chemical machinery breaking down large complex molecules like dna this so-called oxygen toxicity is one of the reasons that our bodies begin to break down as we age our cells are gradually damaged by oxygen over our lives to the point where they can no longer effectively do their jobs this of course had never been a problem for anaerobic archaean bacteria but in an increasingly oxygenic world the risk of toxic oxygen became one that could no longer be ignored bacteria reproduce in a simple way an individual clones its dna and splits the cell in two producing a sister daughter clone identical in every way to its parent but if oxygen damages the dna of the parent then the daughter inherits that damage unchanged over many generations the oxygen damage acquired over individual lifetimes accumulates and grows until even a simple cell can no longer function the lineage of clones is doomed this was the fate that befell probably the most famous clone of all dolly the sheep dolly was cloned from a six-year-old sheep in 1996 genetically identical to her sister mother dolly died at just six and a half despite her breed having a usual lifespan of 12 years she had developed diseases associated with old age having inherited the oxygenically aged dna of her mother in a sense she was already six years old when she was born and the first eukaryotes put themselves at even greater risk through the house guests living within them mitochondrial symbiotes need oxygen to release energy from food and chloroplast symbiotes actually pump oxygen into the cell as they perform photosynthesis so eukaryote not only had to survive in oxygenated waters they had to survive the toxic oxygen within themselves in the name of adaptation they had invited the killers in through the front door those that had survived the great oxygen extinction now faced a slower but no less terminal fate thanks to the ongoing attack of oxygen so another extraordinary evolutionary innovation was needed to ensure the survival of the survivors that innovation was sex in modern animals and plants sexual reproduction is a complex affair with specialized anatomy and instinctive behavior to ensure the continuation of the species take for example the male black widow spider who must walk into the jaws of death just to approach his mate to avoid being mistaken for prey he performs a curious dance vibrating his abdomen at just the right frequency the female knows not to eat him straight away allowing him to approach and complete the act before eating him after all but sex on the cellular level is little more than a modification to the dance already being done by bacteria worldwide instead of copying the entire genome and cleanly splitting a cell in two the eukaryotes copy just half their dna and create sex cells much smaller than themselves thus depleted these sex cells cannot survive alone but must join with another from another individual to complete the sequence and make themselves whole once again fully restored the daughter is therefore a blend of two parents rather than a clone of just one by complicating reproduction in this way requiring two parents to make new life rather than just one the early eukaryotes won themselves vital protection against the toxic oxygen in their cells chance determines which section of dna a daughter will inherit from her two parents and there's a good chance that those sections will be as yet undamaged by oxygen for her the new generation the oxygen clock is reset the risks posed by oxygen over time are so great and the protection offered by sexual reproduction so complete that scientists believe eukaryotes could simply not have survived without the invention of sex today 99.99 of all eukaryotes from single cells to the largest of multicellular animals reproduce sexually to be a eukaryote is to have sex and that link was likely forged right at the beginning of eukaryotic history in the brave new world revealed after the oxygen extinction and so erasmus darwin in his modest english townhouse in the 18th century was unknowingly peering through two billion years of history as he considered the courting dance of plants sexual reproduction is the source of variation in all living things and right at the beginning that variation was critical for the survival of an entire domain when erasmus looked around him he saw a world dominated by multicellular eukaryotes all eukaryotes are dependent on the oxygen machinery inside their cells and the sexual reproduction that injects variation into every generation all this was made possible by an apocalyptic event more than two billion years previous the great oxygen extinction just as we can thank the kt extinction for our mammal lines dominance over the dinosaurs so we can thank the oxygen extinction for the diversity and dominance of eukaryotes across the globe it took extraordinary strife to produce the extraordinary diversity we enjoy in the world today [Music] even the darkest nights end letting the sun rise on a world of new opportunity you've been watching the entire history of the earth don't forget to like and subscribe and leave a comment to tell us what you think thanks for watching and we'll see you next time
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Channel: History of the Earth
Views: 381,565
Rating: 4.9229403 out of 5
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Length: 27min 56sec (1676 seconds)
Published: Wed Jan 06 2021
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