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Proterozoic photosynthesis – a critical review
Author(s) -
Butterfield Nicholas J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
palaeontology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.69
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1475-4983
pISSN - 0031-0239
DOI - 10.1111/pala.12211
Subject(s) - photosynthesis , biology , cyanobacteria , proterozoic , biosphere , fossil record , polyphyly , convergent evolution , ecology , paleontology , botany , evolutionary biology , clade , phylogenetics , gene , tectonics , biochemistry , bacteria
Chlorophyll‐based photosynthesis has fuelled the biosphere since at least the early A rchean, but it was the ecological takeover of oxygenic cyanobacteria in the early P alaeoproterozoic, and of photosynthetic eukaryotes in the late N eoproterozoic, that gave rise to a recognizably modern ocean–atmosphere system. The fossil record offers a unique view of photosynthesis in deep time, but is deeply compromised by differential preservation and non‐diagnostic morphologies. The pervasively polyphyletic expression of modern cyanobacterial phenotypes means that few P roterozoic fossils are likely to be members of extant clades; rather than billion‐year stasis, their similarity to modern counterparts is better interpreted as a combination of serial convergence and extinction, facilitated by high levels of horizontal gene transfer. There are few grounds for identifying cyanobacterial akinetes or crown‐group N ostocales in the P roterozoic record. Such recognition undermines the results of various ancestral state reconstruction analyses, as well as molecular clock estimates calibrated against demonstrably problematic P roterozoic fossils. Eukaryotic organisms are likely to have acquired their (stem‐group nostocalean) photoendosymbionts/plastids by at least the P alaeoproterozoic, but remained ecologically marginalized by incumbent cyanobacteria until the late N eoproterozoic appearance of suspension‐feeding animals.

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