日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

USEUROPEAFRICAASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
China
Home / China / World

Ocean species may have been 1st to mate

By Agence France-Presse in Paris | China Daily | Updated: 2015-08-06 07:40

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 about 565 million years ago just may have been 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 - 2 kilometers - 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 categorize as complex organisms.

Shaped like an oval skull cap, Fractofusus lived in communities, with generations spread outward in concentric circles and linked by spindly, branchlike connectors. Adults could reach 40 cm 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 colonize great swathes 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 on the Canadian island of Newfoundland.

"We already knew that Fractofusus had a non-random spatial pattern," Mitchell said. But it was only after the researchers mapped out the rock surfaced that they realized 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.

 

Editor's picks
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 色婷av| 欧美精品一二三 | 在线只有精品 | 男人的天堂影院 | 日日夜夜狠狠爱 | 91精品久久久久久粉嫩 | 九九热精品视频在线 | 日韩久久一区二区三区 | 欧美一级性片 | 美女黄色大片 | 久久精品一区二区 | 国产精品视频久久久久久久 | av一区二区三区 | 久久噜噜噜 | 国产精品成人va在线观看 | 天天综合天天综合 | 成年人免费看毛片 | 欧美精品午夜 | 亚州综合 | 怡春院久久| 亚洲不卡一 | 亚洲欧美日韩激情 | 国产一区二区三区视频在线 | www成人网 | 黄色免费大片 | 中日韩中文字幕 | 中文字幕综合在线 | 97综合网| 日韩精品一区二区三区丰满 | 丁香色综合| 欧美h在线观看 | 国产夫绿帽单男3p精品视频 | 在线毛片网站 | 亚洲国产成人在线视频 | www.黄色网 | 成人午夜视频免费看 | 一区在线观看 | 久久国产精品免费 | 免费一级片在线观看 | 成人h网站 | 在线看片中文字幕 |