The transition from dominant bacterial to eukaryotic marine primary productivity was one of the most profound ecological revolutions in the Earth's history, reorganizing the distribution of carbon and nutrients in the water column and increasing energy flow to higher trophic levels. But the causes and geological timing of this transition, as well as possible links with rising atmospheric oxygen levels and the evolution of animals, remain obscure. Here we present a molecular fossil record of eukaryotic steroids demonstrating that bacteria were the only notable primary producers in the oceans before the Cryogenian period (720-635 million years ago). Increasing steroid diversity and abundance marks the rapid rise of marine planktonic algae (Archaeplastida) in the narrow time interval between the Sturtian and Marinoan 'snowball Earth' glaciations, 659-645 million years ago. We propose that the incumbency of cyanobacteria was broken by a surge of nutrients supplied by the Sturtian deglaciation. The 'Rise of Algae' created food webs with more efficient nutrient and energy transfers, driving ecosystems towards larger and increasingly complex organisms. This effect is recorded by the concomitant appearance of biomarkers for sponges and predatory rhizarians, and the subsequent radiation of eumetazoans in the Ediacaran period.
The period 800-717 million years (Ma) ago, in the lead-up to the Sturtian Snowball glaciation, saw an increase in the diversity of eukaryotic microfossils. To afford an independent and complementary view of this evolutionary period, this study presents the distribution of eukaryotic biomarkers from three pre-Sturtian successions across the supercontinent Rodinia: the ca. 780 Ma Kanpa Formation of the Western Australian Officer Basin, the ca. 800-740 Ma Visingsö Group of Sweden, and the 740 Ma Chuar Group in Arizona, USA. The distribution of eukaryotic steranes is remarkably similar in the three successions but distinct from all other known younger and older sterane assemblages. Cholestane was the only conventional structure, while indigenous steranes alkylated in position C-24, such as ergostane, stigmastane, dinosterane and isopropylcholestane, and n-propylcholestane, were not observed. This sterane distribution appears to be age diagnostic for the pre-Sturtian Neoproterozoic. It attests to the distinct evolutionary state of pre-Snowball eukaryotes, pointing to a taxonomic disparity that was still lower than in the Ediacaran (635-541 Ma). All three basins also show the presence of a new C28 sterane that was tentatively identified as 26-methylcholestane, here named cryostane. The only known extant organisms that can methylate sterols in the 26-position are demosponges. This assignment is plausible as molecular clocks place the appearance of the earliest animals into the pre-Sturtian Neoproterozoic. The unusual 26-methylsterol may have protected sponges, but also other eukaryotes, against their own membranolytic toxins. Some protists release lytic toxins to deter predators and kill eukaryotic prey. As conventional membrane sterols can be the site of attack for these toxins, sterols with unusual side-chain modification protect the cell. This interpretation of cryostane supports fossil evidence of predation in the Chuar Group and promotes hypotheses about the proliferation of eukaryophagy in the lead-up to the Cryogenian.
Microbialites are organosedimentary deposits formed by the interaction of benthic microbial communities with their environment (Burne & Moore, 1987) and provide the only continuous macroscopic record for life spanning its appearance in the Archean through to the present day (Riding, 2000). Biological, physical, and chemical processes combine to produce an internal structure characteristic of microbialites, which include laminated fabrics and clotted to unlayered fabrics (Kennard & James, 1986).
Exceptional microfossil preservation, whereby sub-cellular details of an organism are conserved, remains extremely rare in the Precambrian rock record. We here report the first occurrence of exceptional cellular preservation by the rare earth element (REE) phosphates monazite and xenotime. This occurs in ~1 billion-year-old lake sediments where REEs were likely concentrated by local erosion and drainage into a closed lacustrine basin. Monazite and xenotime preferentially occur inside planktonic cells where they preserve spheroidal masses of plasmolyzed cell contents, and occasionally also membranous fragments. They have not been observed associated with cell walls or sheaths, which are instead preserved by clay minerals or francolite. REE phosphates are interpreted to be the earliest minerals precipitated in these cells after death, with their loci controlled by the micro-scale availability of inorganic phosphate (P i ) and REEs, probably sourced from polyphosphate granules within the cells. The strong affinity of REEs for phosphate and the insolubility of these minerals once formed means that REE phosphates have the potential for rapid preservation of cellular morphology after death and durability in the rock record. Hence, authigenic REE phosphates provide a promising new target in the search for the preservation of intra-cellular components of fossilised microorganisms.
The siliciclastic ~1 Ga‐old strata of the Torridon Group, Scotland, contain some of the most exquisitely preserved three‐dimensional organic‐walled microfossils (OWMs) of the Precambrian. A very diverse microfossil assemblage is hosted in a dominantly phosphatic and clay mineral matrix, within the Diabaig and the Cailleach Head (CH) Formations. In this study, we report on several microfossil taxa within the CH Formation (Leiosphaeridia minutissima, Leiosphaeridia crassa, Synsphaeridium spp. and Myxococcoides spp.) that include populations of cells containing an optically transparent and highly refringent mineral, here identified using electron microscopy as anatase (TiO2). Most anatase crystals occur entirely within individual cells, surrounded by unbroken carbonaceous walls. Rarely, an anatase crystal may protrude outside a cell, interpreted to correspond to zones where the cell wall had broken down prior to anatase precipitation. Where an anatase crystal entombs an organic intracellular inclusion (ICI), the ICI is large and well preserved. These combined observations indicate that the intracellular anatase is an authigenic sedimentary phase, making this the first report of in situ precipitated anatase intimately associated with microfossils. The ability of anatase to preserve relatively large volumes of intracellular and cell wall organic material in these cells suggests that the crystallisation of anatase entombed cellular contents particularly quickly, soon after the death of the cell. This is consistent with the strong affinity of Ti for organic material, the low solubility of TiO2, and reports of Ti occurring in living organisms. With the data currently available, we propose a mineralisation pathway for anatase involving Ti complexation with organic ligands within specific cells, leading to localised post‐mortem anatase nucleation inside these cells as the complexes broke down. Further overgrowth of the anatase crystals was likely fuelled by very early diagenetic mobilisation of Ti that had been bound to more labile organic material nearby in the sediments.
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