Was the Evolution of Life as we Know it Inevitable?
If variation is ubiquitous, and the variants
that survive and reproduce best in a given environment come to dominate
populations in an inevitable process, then wouldn't evolution proceed the same
way again if it started all over? Did
the process of evolution lead inexorably to life as we know it? I will argue that the answer is
"no", that although the process of evolution always works in the same
way, the outcome is highly contingent on a complex array of factors.
First, "life as we know it" is only
a small slice of life on Earth. Most of
us spend our days noticing only a few types of organisms - mammals (our
families and pets), maybe other vertebrates (birds, fish), flowering plants
(nearly everything in our yards except conifers), and perhaps fungi or
"lower" plants like moss and algae if we look hard. But fungi, plants and animals are just the
tips of the top branches on the tree of life, and even within these huge groups
of organisms, only one species is usually considered as "intelligent
life".
As mentioned before, most species on Earth
have not yet been discovered or named by scientists - we may know most of the
vertebrates, but in other groups, there are still many types of organisms that
remain unknown to science. Of those
organisms that have been named (about 1,413,000 species) most are insects (>
50%, Fig, 1). About 20% are flowering
plants and conifers, while mammals (which are grouped into "other
animals" in Figure 1) number only 4000 species.
The animal phylum in which vertebrates are
found (Phylum Chordata) was the last animal phylum to diversify, and
within this, the evolutionary path to mammals, and then on to primates (monkeys
and chimps) and finally to humans has been a complex one. At many points, the outcome of evolution
could have been different had even a small aspect of the complex environment of
life been different. The evolutionary
process is highly contingent. Natural
selection modifies what is already present, given the genetic variation that is
available, to promote traits that are favorable in the current
environment. Evolution by natural
selection is also opportunistic.
Natural selection favors the best characteristics that are
available. It does not lead to adaptation
to future environments, nor preserve adaptations to past environments if such
traits are no longer advantageous. Life
could not have (and didn't) begin with complex organisms such as mammals,
because life began as simple self-replicating molecules from which complexity
evolved through an ongoing process of descent with modification.
The time
course of the evolutionary path of life on Earth can be visualized as a 24-hour
clock (figure 4 below). The evolution of life
on Earth has been proceeding for 3.9 billion years, since the appearance of the
first prokaryotes (single cells with no nucleus, such as bacteria). The immensity of time that passed between
the evolution of these first life forms and the first multicellular organisms
(2.8 billion years) is hard to fully grasp.
For about the first 3.6 billion years of life, all living things
occupied the oceans. The land was
nothing but bare rock for all this time.
Only 500-440 million years ago did organisms begin to colonize
land. The clock metaphor makes the
brevity of the existence of "intelligent" life on earth particularly
obvious. If the Earth was formed in the
first seconds of the "day", the first humans did not appear until
11:59:40 in the history of Earth - just a few seconds before the present (about
100,000 years ago).
Figure 4. Earth's
history depicted on a 24 hour clock.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, Table 17-1.
Consider the impact of this evolutionary time
scale on the likelihood that intelligent life would be found by an alien
searching for life on our planet.
Clearly, for most of Earth's history the only forms of life to have been
found would be prokaryotes in the ocean (Domains Bacteria and Archaea). A time traveler that happened upon our world
within the most recent "hours" of its existence (about the past 400
million years) might have been able to see simple land plants, amphibians and
reptiles. Mammals only began to proliferate
after the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. It would have to be a lucky time traveler
indeed that happened upon our world during the "20 seconds" of its
day that it has been occupied by humans.
If "intelligent" life has evolved in other worlds, one could
expect that the same immense amount of time may have elapsed there before its
appearance. What is the chance that
during the brief existence of intelligent life on two worlds, they would find
one another? It seems much more likely
that if we were to find life on other worlds, that it would be some life form
that were present during the bulk of the long time course of evolution, such as
a prokaryote (see also the next chapter in this volume).
Contributed by: Dr. Sara Via
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