The asexual creature of the deep

'Fractofusus looked like nothing that is alive today.'

'Fractofusus looked like nothing that is alive today.'

Published Aug 5, 2015

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Paris - Somewhere between the rise of single-cell organisms from the primordial soup and the advent of dating apps, reproduction made the leap from cloning to sex.

A ghostly, bottom-dwelling ocean creature that came and went some 565 million years ago just may be the first to cross that threshold, according to a study published this week in Nature.

“Fractofusus looked like nothing that is alive today,” said the study's lead author Emily Mitchell, a researcher at the University of Cambridge.

“They lived in very deep water - two kilometres - far below the photic zone, so they were not plants,” Mitchell told AFP. “They had no mouths or any animal features, nor were they fungi.”

But they were what biologists categorise as complex organisms.

Shaped like an oval skull cap, Fractofusus lived in communities, with generations spread outward in concentric circles and linked by spindly, branch-like connectors. Adults could reach 40 centimetres across, with babies a tenth that size.

While they appear to have gone extinct quickly, at least on a geological time scale, the enigmatic organisms did manage to colonise great swaths of ocean floor.

We know this because they left fossils, lots of them. Mitchell and colleagues used spatial and statistical analysis to examine more than 1 000 specimens spread across three sites in Newfoundland, Canada.

“We already knew that Fractofusus had a non-random spatial pattern,” Mitchell explained. But it was only after the researchers mapped out the rock surfaced that they realised that the patterns were not caused by environmental forces such as currents, but a reproductive process.

The vast majority of individuals were clones that formed from runners, called stolon, similar to strawberry or spider plants today.

Up to that point in Earth's history - the Ediacaran age, stretching from 580 to 541 million years ago - that's how reproduction happened. Animals and plants with clear sexual differentiation did not appear on the scene until the subsequent Cambrian explosion.

But cloning did not explain how Fractofusus got from one part of the ocean floor to another, and that is where things got interesting.

The original settlers of a new territory arrived in the form of waterborne organism parts called propagules.

These tiny, sub-millimetre buds, unlike clones, were independent, and could travel great distances. Moreover, they were produced only rarely, possibly as a result of a disturbance such as volcanic ash fall, Mitchell explained.

“The babies would be distinct, new individuals capable of living independently of their parents.”

It is possible that they were generated asexually. “But if propagules were generated by sexual reproduction, Fractofusus would be the oldest example of large-organism sexual reproduction,” she added.

AFP

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