Life on Earth: Diversity and Adaptation
One of the hallmarks of life on Earth is its
astonishing diversity. No one really
knows for sure how many different species occupy the Earth, with current
estimates falling anywhere between 10 and 100 million species (Wilson,
1992). Of those, only a small fraction
are known to science even well enough to have a name (about 1,413,000 species
have been named, Figure 1 below). For far
fewer species is much of anything known about the details of the lives they
lead on our planet.
Figure.
1. Organisms of the world, by numbers of named species. From Wilson (1992), p. 135.
From what we do know, however,
it is clear that organisms make their living in an amazing array of different
ways. Life on Earth may have one cell
or many. Some organisms (plants) make
their own food by capturing energy from the sun, others eat plants directly or
eat the herbivores. Virtually every
multicellular organism has other organisms that live in it or on it, and still
others use dead biological material for food.
The array of sizes ranges over orders of magnitude, from microscopic
bacteria to free-living animals that can weigh tons, to fungi in which a single
organism may occupy hundreds of square miles of soil. Finally, organisms come in all shapes (Figure 2 below), from those
lacking any symmetry (such as sponges, Phylum Porifera) to the radially
symmetrical jellyfish and corals (Phylum Cnidaria), to the bilaterally symmetrical
higher invertebrates and vertebrates (Phylum Chordata). As if this weren't enough, the fossil record
shows us that even more bizarre forms once lived on Earth. During the Cambrian period, and preserved in
the Burgess Shale fossil deposits from British Columbia, we can see organisms
with shapes not present in any living organism, that are so different they fit
into no phylum that is currently alive. So, life on Earth has been even more diverse than it is
today. Of these millions of different
species, only one, Homo sapiens, is classified as
"intelligent life". For
various reasons discussed below, the probability that life in any form could
occur in other universes is a much broader question than the probability that
"intelligent" life could be found elsewhere.
Figure. 2. A simple
classification scheme for the major phyla of animals. Some of the key innovations that occurred during animal evolution
are indicated in the ovals. Note that
the invertebrate lineage most closely related to Chordates are the starfish and
sea urchins (Phylum Echinodermata). From Audesirk/Audesirk, BIOLOGY: Life On Earth, 5/e, © 1999. Electronically reproduced by permission
of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Figure
22-1.
The second
defining feature of life on Earth is adaptation. An adaptation can be defined as a biological characteristic that
suits an organism to the particular environment in which it lives. Adaptations may be seen in nearly all
aspects of the size, shape and coloration of organisms, as well as in the
biochemical and physiological details of how organisms work. For example, the praying mantis is shaped and colored just like the plants in the habitat it
occupies. This resemblance to the
background (crypticity) permits the mantis to effectively stalk its prey while
concealing itself from its own predators.
The converse of crypticity is seen in plants with brightly colored
flowers that attract pollinators, or dangerous and/or distasteful creatures
with orange or yellow and black warning coloration, such as bees and
wasps. These warning colors signal
"Dont mess with me or you'll be sorry". Both of these types of coloration (cryptic and warning) are
adaptations that provide these organisms with enhanced survival or reproduction
in their particular environment.
Adaptations can also be seen in how organisms work. The mechanics of flight in insects and birds
has lead to exquisite engineering modifications of structure with accompanying
adaptations in muscle physiology, circulation and respiration. The ability of a male moth to detect the
scent of a female from 2 miles away, using highly elaborated sensory organs on
the antennae is an adaptation, as is the organ in pit vipers that permits
detection of warm-blooded prey objects in the dark.
Contributed by: Dr. Sara Via
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