Study finds asexual reproduction slowed early animal evolution

A new study suggests Earth's first animals evolved slowly because they reproduced asexually, limiting competition in ancient oceans. Researchers from the University of Cambridge say a later shift to sexual reproduction helped drive a surge in biodiversity during the Ediacaran period.

The findings, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, focus on organisms from the Ediacaran period between 635 million and 539 million years ago. Many of these early animals, such as Fractofusus, reproduced through runners that created genetically identical offspring, similar to strawberry plants. Lead author Dr. Emily Mitchell said life was stable enough during that time that there was little pressure to evolve new traits. Co-author Professor Andrea Manica noted that connections via runners allowed organisms to share nutrients and avoid direct competition. The team analyzed fossils from Mistaken Point in Newfoundland using laser scanning, spatial analysis and artificial intelligence. Their simulations showed that greater dispersal distances linked to sexual reproduction coincided with rising environmental stress and higher species diversity. The research received support from the Natural Environment Research Council.

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Scientists have determined that structures once seen as traces of tiny animals in 540-million-year-old Brazilian rocks are actually fossilized communities of bacteria and algae. The reexamination uses advanced imaging to reveal preserved cells and organic material.

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More than 700 fossils from the Jiangchuan Biota in Yunnan Province, southwest China, dating 554-539 million years ago in the late Ediacaran, include early relatives of starfish, acorn worms, deuterostomes, and other bilaterians. Led by Dr. Gaorong Li of Yunnan University, the discovery—after nearly a decade of fieldwork—challenges the suddenness of the Cambrian explosion by showing diverse animal communities predated it. The results, published in Science (DOI: 10.1126/science.adu2291), feature exceptionally preserved carbonaceous films revealing fine details like digestive systems.

A modeling study suggests mirror organisms would face severe barriers to survival in natural environments. Other researchers argue the analysis underestimates potential risks and evolutionary adaptability.

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Researchers at Yale University have proposed a new model explaining the dramatic fluctuations in Earth's magnetic field during the Ediacaran Period, from 630 to 540 million years ago. Their analysis of rocks from Morocco suggests these changes followed a structured global pattern rather than random chaos. The findings, published in Science Advances, could improve reconstructions of ancient continents.

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