Showing posts with label PAART. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PAART. Show all posts

07 April, 2020

ALBANIAN FAUNA

THE FIRST ANIMALS...
...OR IS IT?

Diorama presenting the Ediacaran biota

On Earth, this point in time would be comparable to the Ediacaran Period of the Neoproterozoic - marked by the appearance of soft-body animals in fossil record.
On Earth, for a long period of time, we can just split animals into Fungi, Ichthyospores, Filastereans, and the metazoans that would split later on into the Choanoflagellates and Eumetazoans - these last two, along with the other creatures, were suppressed by the Cryogenian, and after the planet warmed up again, Metazoans spread and diversified, the Ediacaran period thus is of a few body plans as nature experiments with it's new environment, and by the start of the Cambrian, we see the rise of basically every other base body-plan we see today.
IT'S A SPONGE, IT'S A PLANT, IT'S A WORM, AND SOME TYPE OF WEIRD STRANGE WATER BUGS AND STRANGE FISH... - Bill Wurtz during the ~Caaaaambriaan Explosion~
On Paart however -  we don't have a global freezing as in the Cryogenian to slow down evolution, and thus, is rather safe to assume things would have been way louder on Paart.
Modern Seapens (Ptilosarcus gurneyi) in the deep sea

One remarkable life form that ruled the Ediacaran were the Rangeomorphs, creatures with branches coming out of a semi-rigid stem or skeleton, pretty much like a feather. We know these are a kind of animal and not a plant, because the rocks from the sites were this fossil is found are dated to be under oceans that are over +1km thick, much deeper than the actual range of photosynthesis in water (about 200 meters deep), so they must not be plants but an actual kind animal (maybe and entire extinct kingdom), a simple filter feeding animal - an osmotrophic organism, passively absorbing organic particles into it's body, to be used as building blocks for it's cells - hence why they branched like pens, granting them a large surface area to absorb more nutrients from the water, also reproducing asexually like corals do today.

Rangeomorph reconstructions from fossil beds

At the moment I'm writing this post, and as far as my research for this went - there is an apparent gap between the sessile rangeomorph-like creatures and the mobile and arthropods we see at the dawn of the Cambrian period.

COMPARING EARTH'S EDIACARAN DEVELOPMENT

We can infer though, based on fossil record and on current animal reproduction cycles, that at one time, or several times over a certain period, a group of creatures native to Paart - that reproduced by spreading motile larvae suffered neoteny due an environmental trigger, could well be the drop in temperature of the water, maturing without becoming sessile, in this case - keeping motility, and thus as the cold waters persisted over 45 million years, those creatures developed new ways of living and interacting with the world.
For a long time in the Earth's fossil record, we are not able to see what these creatures looked like, but we can see burrows dug into the layer of bacteria and organic matter surrounding the sessile animals, and those burrows tell us that the larvae were probably benthic and slithered through the seafloor as they ate and grew until maturing into a sessile adult. However, as we dig into newer pre-cambrian rocks, we see those burrows go from aimless and disorganized burrows to non overlapping and patterned ones, what indicates that those benthic creatures are now gaining sensory organs and changing their strategy to better use their energy - not wasting it in already eaten areas.

Those creatures as larvae would be small at first, but once reaching and entirely new environment, with lots of niches to explore and a new ambient that required better ways to move around, they irradiated into new forms and sizes - ranging from millimeters to a couple centimeters, and giving rise to the creatures we see in the dawn of the Cambrian.
We can also see that this theory connects the existence of segments in animals with the pre-existing segments of stem animals that do have a very strong evidence and reason of why they are, and that will be carried along with them.

PAARTIAN STEM ANIMALS

The chemistry of the oceans at that time is likely to be rich in carbon compounds, as well other minerals washed out by the waves and storms from the continent to the sea by the hyper-canes and tsunamis that occurred regularly on Paart during this period.
This put seafloor sedimentation with regular thin layers or bacteria processed sediment and pure sediment brought from the land.
And we can infer that such a regular event in the environment's history would indeed influence the path evolution takes.

Early Paleopyrgian fauna would look pretty much like Earth's Ediacaran fauna, but as the animals are filtered by the subsequent underwater floods of sediments - one strategy that could arise is that during the early time of it's maturing stage, the creature would quickly develop a long vertical stem with a feeding surface on it's tip and after a certain age start building from this tip and beyond, this way, even when the foot of the animal becomes buried in the sediment, it can still feed and live, and I say after a certain age because despite this process happening regularly, it's rate could be by far outrun by the rate of growing of the creature, such as that by the point the sediment reaches the feeding surface of the animal, it would be already long dead or at the end of it's life cycle.
By the Neopyrgian, this leaves us with animals that would look a lot like peacock feathers instead, a rather dense stem at the foot to withstand the pressure from the sediment, with small less dense filaments through the stem and a large and dense surface for feeding on the top.

The general body plan of Neoproterozoic creatures over time, sorted left to right, from older to newer

Over time, some orders will eventually out-compete others, and phylums will be replaced by ones with better versions of the same strategies, that's probably what happened to the Ediacaran biota once Metazoans have arisen.

ATMOSPHERE, OCEAN CHEMISTRY AND LIFE

The southern ocean would cast several hypercanes and tsunamis over the equatorial part of the supercontinent

The Ediacaran biota were very intimate of the bacterial mat on the seafloor, which consumed the oxygen and other nutrients from the oceans, one strategy that helped the nutrients to cycle through the trophic levels was to eat the microbial mat. Over time, animals begun to get more and more effective at eating the microbial mat, exposing the immature planetary soil, the exposure of regolith to erosion led to the release of chemicals such as calcium and phosphates, the phosphates were rather very useful to life, but calcium were not so much, to avoid calcium toxicity, animals begun to build shells of calcium compounds to both protect their bodies from the environment and to secret the toxic calcium excess in their bodies. The biomineralization, the end of the microbial mat, and the arise of swimming animals, let to the positive feedback loop of rising biodiversity - and unfortunately, this process may ended up destroying the specific environment the Ediacarans were so well adapted to live on.

Whereas on Earth, the oceans would be of a reducing character, the oceans of Paart would be pretty oxidizing.
The solubility of oxygen in water is dependent on temperature and pressure. Increase the pressure (using gravity or water column) and the amount of oxygen water can potentially store increases - though that would probably mean this deep waters would have less contact with the atmosphere and are closer to oxygen consuming bacteria. Increase the temperature and the oxygen levels will decrease, as the water molecules are further away from each other, allowing free oxygen to escape more easily.
The temperature of Paart at this time is rather cold, about 10 degrees Celsius - at Earth parameters, this would mean an equilibrium between 10 and 11,5mg/L.
But Paart has a weaker gravity than Earth (0.71g of gravity), a less dense atmosphere (0.97atm of pressure), and it's atmospheric oxygen is about 14% by the late Paleopyrgian.
Which renders oxygen level capacity, given the salinity of Earth seawater - at 9,57mg/L.
But since we have to consider that at 14% O², the actual equilibrium ceiling goes down to 6,5mg/L.
For perspective, under the same temperature conditions, the Ediacaran oceans would bear only 1,8mg/L.

With 3,6x more oxygen than Earth's oceans, creatures would have the potential to grow 1,5x larger than on Earth (square cube law), that of course wouldn't last longer, as the microbial mat and exposed regolith would slowly deplete the oxygen content of the water.

As the sediment oxidizes in the water, it creates several compounds such as calcium carbonate and calcium sulfate, and other earthly oxides.
Carbon dioxide and some metals like bismuth and aluminum are way more common than other substances dissolved in water, and are way more likely to be used to build protective shells - against what? you may ask...
Aside from the sediment's pressure, Elpidomorphs (Greek for hope shaped, like a sinking hand asking for help) would like to defend themselves against their neighbors pesky kids, as they would easily eat through their stems if they weren't thick enough, and later - if they weren't properly armored with a layer of calcium carbonate, and for the ones able to, a shiny dark shell of bismuth and silicon carbide, leaving the only food source available for them at the moment to be the bacterial mat at the seafloor.

 Medusas go through a young Polyp phase before the adult motile phase
Some of Paart's animals may also suffer double neoteny, having the polyp-like / sessile part of their lives as young and turning motile as they mature

CLIMATE AND ORIGIN OF STEM ANIMALS

And from that, we get larvae that now prey on each other instead, and subsequently they now can establish an ecosystem of their own, this strategy of changing diet as the organism matures is particularly efficient as it grants the adults will not out-compete their brood for resources - and can be well observed in insect life cycles, and while some may preserve this strategy, others on the far south regions of the planet where the waters are colder and not so turbulent as on the north, neoteny may kick in most of species, and we would now have several hundreds of genera, dozens of orders that had converged into similar-looking body-plans and strategies, despite their last common ancestor lived about 50 or 70 million years prior to their existence.

So, while on Earth, the Ediacaran fauna managed to persist for about only 40 or so million years, and Rangeomorphs in particular - only about 25 million years, but here the gradual evolution and existence of different habitats along different latitudes and temperatures, allowed this type of animal to be more successful, already expanding through the 45 million years of the Mesofrigian, and the 110 million years of the next epoch, the Albanian (after latim for "striped", referring to the alternate layering of organic and sediment substrates), making it through 155 million years, leaving a huge mark in the fossil record, as the rapid sedimentation of the seafloor would allow organisms to preserve nicely.

CLADISTICS

Let's organize these first animals, at the moment, they all live in rather similar looking environments (banded nutrient rich seafloor), and do share a major characteristic in common (being segmented), and as well, are simple soft-bodied organisms - I then name this phylum, Albazoa (Striped Animals) - as I'm writing this, the term Kingdom in cladistics has fallen in disuse, and I could not find further substitute term, so I will try not bother with kingdom naming so far, as we pretty much can discern what a plant or animal is.

The chart shows a Xenorangeans organized left to right by latitude, and bottom to top by cladistics
Names shown are the Orders of animals inside the Classes Ptosimorpha and Elpidomorpha


Early related to the Xenorangeans, another Albazoan group are the ones which use the sediment as protection.
Polyps that let themselves to be buried in organic matter, and buds up as sediment falls off covering it's feeding surface, and some that deliberately build up sediment as protection - Chalea (SHA-LEH-AH) (derived from carpet in Greek).

The chart shows Chaleans organized left to right by latitude, and bottom to top by cladistics
Names shown are the main Orders of animals inside the Classes of Chaleans

We can also expect several families - like sea-slugs do, to enter temporary or long term symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae in shallower regions of 200m or less for when conventional food (the microbial mat) is scarce - and oh boy it will be scarce over time.

SYMMETRY AND RISE OF METAZOA

The exact origin of Metazoans (animals like sponges, crabs, you, your dog/cat) on Earth still quite a mystery, over time, we have proposed that all Metazoans had originated in a core original group or colony of single celled organisms - that, regardless of their original configuration, developed into specialized cells or tissues with specific functions like, respiration and digestion of food. Others have suggested that this didn't happen only once, but several times over the course of history, and that all Metazoan groups are not related at all, but evolved independently from different protist ancestors.

In any case, and whatever type of simple animal the Ediacarans were (because they are multicellular, but lack specified tissues - still, they're not sponges because they don't look alike sponges, and doesn't seem to have any other specific structures for feeding or reproduction, as said before, they could well be composed of slightly differentiated cells but being like a balloon of tissue feeding through osmosis), protists were already around by that time, living as bottom feeders.

Whatever led to the Ediacaran success, be it the particularly chill environment or the richness of food, it was so particular that the mere removal of one piece made their entire reign fall. I like to assume something similar to the rise of dinosaurs happened in the Ediacaran-Cambrian period - dinosaurs weren't the strongest, or more resilient of animals around, they were generalists, and when the climate changed, leading to the fall of the environment where the saurosuchians lived, they were just the ones with more tools at their disposal, quickly taking over the empty niches.
As well, protists and eventually Metazoans, were just the more prompted to adapt to the new environment, and then we could say that, like it would later happen several times in Earth's history, the success of a species may be the exact key of their downfall.

Radial symmetry or lack of any symmetry at all is a rather efficient way to catch food, when all you need to do is sit on the bottom of the ocean and wait for the food to come to you.
However, when you have motility, disposing of several filaments or surfaces may be a disadvantage (depending on your scale), perhaps, the key to the downfall of the Ediacaran biota, is that they had long lost their evolutionary potential to overcome future disasters.

See, insects as we know them, don't have the evolutionary potential to take over the world and become a technological civilization, because the process that allow that exist in macroscopic scales, and their own body structure and respiratory system, doesn't allow for an individual to reach larger sizes without collapsing or suffocating (lobsters suffocate and die after they reach a certain size because their body becomes larger than their gills can provide oxygen to).

As well, Ediacarans would be so well adapted to a low oxygen environment, rich in organic matter, and as well, grown sessile, adapted to these specific niches, that evolution couldn't work it's way back on the majority of creatures to give them any chance against Metazoans, which not only occupied several orders of magnitude, but probably slingshot their way up the trophic levels through the success of Ediacarans - which gathered lots of nutrients in their bodies and lived in large clumped numbers all over the Earth's oceans, creating ecumenical cradles of bottom-feeders, the abundance of dead Ediacarans to prey on led to the appearance of active scavengers, and after that, active predators on the abundance of other Metazoans, which later on became more adapted to the new substrate, climate and trophic relationships.

The Ediacaran substrate were firm, layered, anoxic, with a sulphidic substrate, whereas Cambrian substrate were, loose, with an oxygenated upper substrate with burrowing animals

The little critters (Illaboreans, Erpaeans, and Metazoans) that have arisen by the Late Albanian, will over time - eat away the microbial mat, but as there is more oxygen available in the water, rapid grow back is rather a given, spanning the time required to the destruction of the Albazoan environment plus the ever pressuring environment will not let them settle down with one or a couple specific body-plans, on Paart's Neoproterozoic oceans, Albazoans had the time, and pushes into motility through neoteny, they will persist and directly compete with Metazoans for the oceans of Paart.

Albazoans crowding the Early Albanian seafloor, the thick bacterial mat gives the soil a light appearance

This starting evolutionary arms race, between Albazoans and several Metazoan factions, will be the fuse leading to Paart's Cambrian Explosion event...


- M.O. Valent, 07/04/2020


14 March, 2020

PAART | PROTEROZOIC EON | NEOPROTEROZOIC ERA

NEOPROTEROZOIC ERA

PALEOPYRGIAN PERIOD

By the end of the Ectasian at 3690Myo, Paart had its first eukaryotes, a couple hundred species of rhizopods, diatoms, cilliates, and by the start of the Paleopyrgian, true algae.
By this time, land was dominated by a couple dozen species of fungi and bacteria that fed on the biologic material thrown upon land by storms and waves, those locations would often bear small towers of few centimeters tall, built with leftover material and minerals on the soil and decaying matter. Hence the name, "Ancient Towers".

Ice sheets covering the southern continental shelf would often break up and shed icebergs into the sea

The tightening of the gap between continents slowly decreased the amount of space available for stromatolite formation, though algae were still doing well - isolated ponds, insular regions and lakes that formed trapping algae, gave rise to variants that could thrive with less water (as the boreal continent started to trap megatons of ice, lowering the sea-level each year), some early moss-like plants were already starting to thrive on land by the start of a new ice age, the Mesofrigian.

NEOPYRGIAN PERIOD

The start of the Neopyrgian is marked by the appearance of fungi building over plant matter, with several taller structures being able to be constructed as the plants and previous generations of fungi broke up the rock and sand into soil, depositing nutrients.
It is also marked by the extinction of the stromatolite population due the ice age of the Mesofrigian Epoch.

Mesofrigian Epoch

The Mesofrigian was the time by which the continents united into the super-continent Sthalika, and fully closed it's insular regions, the mountain ranges by the southern regions deviated all warm wind into the north pole, bringing water vapour further north and increasing the planet's albedo with a polar icecap that extended over 26th parallel, this event lasted for almost 45 million years, reaching it's apex by 3740Myo.
Though this event killed the stromatolite population, the production of oxygen was able to continue far after this, but still with less efficiency - by the early plant life.

The southern ocean would cast several hypercanes and tsunamis over the equatorial part of the supercontinent

The dragging of the continental crust created large portions of shallow seas, in which the developing animal life could flourish, giving rise to the first marine invertebrates and arthropods.

https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/2020/04/neoproterozoic-fauna.html

- M.O. Valent, 14/02/2020
https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/2020/03/paart-proterozoic-eon-mesoproterozoic.html
https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/p/pharenozoic.html

05 March, 2020

PAART | PROTEROZOIC EON | MESOPROTEROZOIC ERA

MESOPROTEROZOIC ERA

STATHERIAN PERIOD

The continents migrated to tropical latitudes, as the ice melted away, and the cloudy atmosphere dissipated, paartian soil could start to come back to it's original color
Stathera is greek for Constant

Paart's oldest exposed continental lithosphere formed during the late Paleoproteroic, ie, pieces of crust that will not subduct (at least, not so soon in it's habitability lifespan).

The Early Statherian is marked by the appearance of the first great microbial structures in the fossil record, stromatolites, which lived in the shallow seas in between the approaching continents...

Spoiler Alert: these guys ain't gonna make it very far D:

Although stromatolites produced large quantities of oxygen in this period, those levels weren't able to go beyond the ~5% mark, having a couple peaks in between volcanic activities...

ECTASIAN PERIOD

From the greek for Area, Éktasi, comes the name of the period that bears large areas of subducting continents which shelfs now are home to billions upon billions of stromatolites

The Ectasian period occupies most of the Mesoproterozoic (~73%), and it is marked by several breakthroughs in life.

The Early Ectasian (3270 ~ 3410Myo), harbors the peak of stromatolite population, covering ares the size of Australia on several occasions.
The Mid Ectasian (3340 ~ 3590Myo), is when the stromatolite formations cause the Second Little Oxygenation Event, when the oxygen levels reached a peak of 14%, also creating a thin layer of oxides upon land.
The Late Ectasian (3590 ~ 3690Myo), earliest Eukaryotes (protozoans) appear followed by sexual reproduction, global temperatures also tended to drop over time as a great portion of the continents concentrated around the south pole...

- M.O. Valent, 05/03/2020

https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/2020/03/paart-proterozoic-eon-paleoproterozoic.html
https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/2020/03/paart-proterozoic-eon-neoproterozoic-era.html

PAART | PROTEROZOIC EON | PALEOPROTEROZOIC ERA

Welcome to the
PALEOPROTEROZOIC ERA

Last time time we saw Paart, the oceans where starting to turn purple because of photosynthetic bacteria, plus the soil on dry land started to oxidize, making the landmasses whiter.


~*Taste the SUN*~
Side effect: now there's oxygen everywhere and the sky is blue - then the Earth might have been a snowball for a while, maybe a couple of times...


Fun Fact 
I didn't actually wanted to "mimic" Earth's history, by no means, I'm just using the continental drift maps and ocean currents to point out the climatic events, and it happens so that we may have a couple more ice ages and desertification along the way...

 Paart's purple oceans slowly turned more foggy as the dissolved metals also oxidized, mainly on shallow seas


In the following millions of years, the planet's index of carbon dioxide had already decreased considerably, plus the increase in overall albedo of the planet, plus the continents drifting closer to the newly formed polar streams where able to capture more water vapor on their surfaces - and the presence of ice decreased the temperatures even more, this period was named Oxygenian, due to the large portions of oxygen released into the atmosphere, still most of it was absorbed by the faster crust cycle (2,15x that of the Earth).

Paart's solar irradiation is on the 64% mark, which means the oxygenic photosynthesis already happens on a steady slow rhythm, plus the faster rate of crust recycling will bring those atmospheric oxygen levels from potentially ~15% - as on Earth at the time - down to between 4,46% and 6,97%.


Hence why I resolved to call this period after the greek fire and volcanoes (among other stuff) god - Hephaestos

The collision of plates that formed the center-left continents opened up a volcanic mountain range, that brought the carbon levels up, but also spilled billions of tons of metals to be oxidized, and the gas reactions created acid clouds and acid rains all over the world, increasing the albedo and also dissolving more rock into the oceans.

From the greek lefkó - meaning white,, here comes the lower part of the Lefíkian period, the Cryogenian (cryo for obvious reasons should I say)

However, as the metals dissolved in the ocean oxidized preventing the oceans from oxygenating properly for a while, that lead to the return of methanogens and rise of cryophile archea and bacteria, many of those traits such as cold resistance would be later inherited by complex life. Once the metals were starting to be not enough to hold the oxygen production, it went to the atmosphere, the reaction between the methane and atmospheric oxygen leads to the formation of carbon dioxide and water, although carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, it's still only 3,5% as effective as methane, and thus, the already cooling planet lost it's thermostat control.
As the extra water vapour could easily follow the inland wind and fall as snow - the central range of volcanic mountains diverged equatorial wind both north and south, the northern hemisphere had a large ocean, which didn't help much with the formation of ice, on the flip-side, the south pole had much land and fewer geographical barriers to the formation of large and thick ice sheets - starting the Cryogenian Epoch.

Relative high absorption of green and blue light by early photosynthesis, sulfur and iron compounds, plus the high volcanic smog content in the atmosphere filtering most of the blue light, later lead to Paart's characteristic cyan photosynthetic life
(Personally, one of the most interesting phases of Paart)

Paart was a very smoggy and cold world, the vapors of volcanic pools carried corrosive compounds and the low temperatures meant that smoke would tend to clump in dense runny clouds... For a long period of early photosynthetic life, blue was an absent color in the sky, for the exception of the days that clouds opened a breach letting out the damaging UV rays burn the bacteria and algae, as a mechanism of defense they turned blue - later that would be inherited as then main characteristic of Paartian plant life, bearing a cyan sometimes bluish pigment, as millions of years later, the planet would still lack a dense ozone layer.

Later, by the end of the Lefíkian, volcanic activity intensified, but it eventually came to a stop at 3120Myo, Paart's oldest exposed continental lithosphere formed during the end of this period.

Early Proterozoic paartian sunset
Notice how Vol is highly distorted due atmospheric refraction


- M.O. Valent, 05/03/2020
- M.O. Valent, updated in 19/04/2020

https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/2020/02/paart-archean-eon-boring-billions.html
https://hard-sci-fi.blogspot.com/2020/03/paart-proterozoic-eon-mesoproterozoic.html

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