Original paper

Is the origin of the diatoms related to the end-Permian mass extinction?

Medlin, Linda K.; Kooistra, Wiebe H.C.F.; Sims, Patricia; Wellbrock, Ursula

Nova Hedwigia Band 65 Heft 1-4 (1997), p. 1 - 11

33 references

published: May 15, 1997

DOI: 10.1127/nova.hedwigia/65/1997/1

BibTeX file

ArtNo. ESP050006500000, Price: 29.00 €

Download preview PDF Buy as PDF

Abstract

Small subunit ribosomal RNA (ssu rRNA) coding regions from 30 diatoms, nine other heterokont algae, three oomycetes, one thraustochytrid and one heterotrophic flagellate were used to construct a molecular clock from maximum-likelihood trees, and from linearized trees using a neighbor-joining analysis. Taxa with fast and/or aberrantly evolving ssu rRNAs were not included in our molecular clock calculations. First appearance dates of diatom taxa from the fossil record were regressed against their corresponding branch lengths to infer the average and earliest possible age for the origin of the heterokont algae. The earliest age estimates (based on the median-evolving diatom taxon in the maximum-likelihood tree or on the average branch length in a linearized tree) suggest that the secondary endosymbiotic event leading to the divergence of pigmented heterokonts from their non-pigmented ancestors is unlikely to have occurred much before the Permian-Triassic boundary. The trees also show that the diatoms, one of the major groups of pigmented heterkonts, must have inherited their diplont life cycle and the ability to form resting stages from the last common ancestor shared with the oomycetes and the other pigmented heterokonts. We hypothesize that non-pigmented, diploid heterokonts, capable of forming resting stages and of stably maintaining a photosynthetic organism within their cytoplasm, had an adaptive advantage over other organisms during the intense climatic tectonic and geochemical changes that led to a mass extinction close to this boundary. After the mass extinction, many niches in the marine and aquatic realms were opened and the heterokont algae, including the diatoms, appear to have diverged after this time.

Keywords

diatomsmolecular clockPermian-Triassic extinctionmolecular evolution