The NYT article below on metamorphosis certainly has the “Wow” factor, which is quite some time ago for me. I never realized that 80% of animal species experience metamorphosis. I’m only familiar with the metamorphosis of the (i) caterpillar – butterfly and (ii) tadpoles – frog. The “wow” came at the end of the article but revealing that would be a spoiler.
We tend to look at life in its adult phase. Our goldilocks planet and its habitable zone allow for life reaching that adult phase. After reading this article, it’s not inconceivable that “life” on other planets should be redefined by including the concept of metamorphosis.
That redefinition would also be consistent with the Fermi paradox: given the immense size of the Universe, there should be life somewhere else but where is everybody? Latter was the question of physicist Enrico Fermi which “arose during a luncheon conversation with Emil Konopinski, Edward Teller, and Herbert York in the summer of 1950″ (OSTI.gov)
Another argument for the above are viruses, which are not in Nature‘s Tree of Life (my blog) because viruses are neither dead nor alive. In simple terms: viruses are considered dead until they find a host and then viruses “become” alive.
This behaviour of viruses may even be another example of (alien) metamorphosis. Interestingly, the ageing of some viruses seems to suggest that viruses could even be extraterrestrial because some viruses seem older than planet Earth itself (my blog, source).
Please also take a(nother) look at this intriguing 2018 Aeon article: Proof of life: how would we recognise an alien if we saw one? (my blog).
On 8 November 2018, Harvard professor Abraham (“Avi”) Loeb “and his postdoc Shmuel Bialy” published a scientific paper claiming that the highly unusual cigar shaped object, which has been nicknamed ‘Oumuamua, might have been an alien spaceship (eg, arxiv, Guardian, WaPo).
Last but not least, in the Men in Black trilogy, intergalactic travellers use metamorphosis for disguising as humans in order to blend into human society.
Until today, I had never realised the importance of metamorphosis. Before, it had seemed a freaky anomaly in nature to me.
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NYT title: Why Would an Animal Trade One Body for Another?
NYT subtitle: Most species undergo metamorphosis, but scientists aren’t sure why the process evolved. One new theory: Metamorphosis gives animals greater access to food.
“As a child growing up in the Netherlands, Hanna ten Brink spent many days lingering by a pond in her family’s garden, fascinated by metamorphosis.
Tadpoles hatched from eggs in the pond and swam about, sucking tiny particles of food into their mouths. After a few weeks, the tadpoles lost their tails, sprouted legs and hopped onto land, where they could catch insects with their new tongues.
Eventually Dr. ten Brink became an evolutionary biologist. Now science has brought her back to that childhood fascination.
Eighty percent of all animal species experience metamorphosis — from frogs to flatfish to butterflies to jellyfish. Scientists are deeply puzzled as to how it became so common.
What evolutionary path could lead to a caterpillar — an admirably adapted leaf-eating machine — to tear down its body and rebuild it as a butterfly?
In the May issue of American Naturalist, Dr. ten Brink, now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Zurich, and her colleagues lay out a road map for the evolution of metamorphosis. It has appeared, they argue, as a way for a species to eat more food.
The path to that feast is hard to travel, and metamorphosis has only arisen a few times in history. But once it does, the scientists also find, it rarely disappears.
Dr. ten Brink, Andre M. de Roos of the University of Amsterdam, and Ulf Dieckmann of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria created complex mathematical equations that captured some of the fundamentals of animal life — how much food they eat, how fast they grow, how many offspring they had and so on.
The researchers began by considering animals that didn’t go through metamorphosis. Keeping the same body through their lives, they are well adapted to one kind of food.
But what if their environment contained a second food, one that they could consume as adults if they evolved a different anatomy? Natural selection would prevent the animals from adding the second food to their diet, the researchers found.
In this case, evolution favors specialists: If animals evolve to eat the second food, their offspring will become worse at consuming the original diet when they’re young. More of them will die before they can mature.
“The obvious solution to the problem is to evolve metamorphosis,” said Dr. ten Brink. Young animals stay well adapted to the original food, while adults switch to the new food with a rebuilt body.
But animals pay a steep price to go through metamorphosis. They burn a lot of calories to tear apart the old anatomy and develop a new one. There’s a chance that this complicated process will go awry, leaving them with defects.
Metamorphosis also takes time, leaving animals vulnerable to predators and parasites. In many cases, Dr. ten Brink and her colleagues found, the cost of metamorphosis is too high for it to be favored by natural selection.
“You have to get back something really good,” she said.
Natural selection will favor metamorphosis if adult animals are rewarded with an abundant supply of food — enough to make up for the cost and to allow them to have lots of offspring.
In early stages of this shift, the adults will start out poorly adapted to the new food. But there’s so much for them to eat that they still get a decent meal.
“I like the concept — I like that they tried to look for the ultimate cause,” said Joanna Wolfe, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard. But she wondered if food is the only reward that can help drive the evolution of metamorphosis.
Some species might benefit in other ways. Adults might take on bodies that allowed them to find mates more successfully, for instance. Larvae in the ocean might change their forms in order to be carried far away by the currents, expanding their range.
“I would like to see some things added to their model,” she said.
Dr. ten Brink agreed that the new study is a foundation for more detailed ones. “This paper is really the start of something,” she said.
If animals so rarely evolve metamorphosis, why is it so common? One reason may be that once metamorphosis arises, it’s very hard for a species to lose it.
It’s easy enough to imagine a situation where giving up metamorphosis would be a benefit. Imagine an outbreak wiping out the food that adults eat. For the species, it would be advantageous for individuals to remain larval and survive on what food remains.
But in most situations, Dr. ten Brink’s study suggests, evolution works against our expectations. If the adult food gets harder to find, natural selection will favor adults that do a better job of finding what little food is left.
“It’s an evolutionary trap,” said Dr. ten Brink. “If conditions get really bad, you go extinct.”
Vincent Laudet, a biologist at Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, said his own research on vertebrates supported Dr. ten Brink’s findings.
The first fish species went through metamorphosis, he noted, and it has largely endured for over half a billion years.
“In some vertebrates, metamorphosis is camouflaged, but it is never lost,” Dr. Laudet said.
When Dr. Laudet speaks of “some vertebrates,” he includes us. When babies leave the womb, their tissues undergo important changes, governed by some of the same hormones that spark metamorphosis in frogs and other animals.
“Our birth, biologically speaking, is a metamorphosis,” Dr. Laudet said.”
Notes NYT:
- Carl Zimmer writes the “Matter” column. He is the author of thirteen books, including “She Has Her Mother’s Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity.”
- A version of this article appears in print on March 26, 2019, on Page D4 of the New York edition with the headline: The Advantages of Body Swapping.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/25/science/metamorphosis-evolution-animals.html
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