Authors
Marco Ghisalberti, David A Gold, Marc Laflamme, Matthew E Clapham, Guy M Narbonne, Roger E Summons, David T Johnston, David K Jacobs
Publication date
2014/2/3
Journal
Current Biology
Volume
24
Issue
3
Pages
305-309
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
At Mistaken Point, Newfoundland, Canada, rangeomorph "fronds" dominate the earliest (579–565 million years ago) fossil communities of large (0.1 to 2 m height) multicellular benthic eukaryotes. They lived in low-flow environments, fueled by uptake [1–3] of dissolved reactants (osmotrophy). However, prokaryotes are effective osmotrophs, and the advantage of taller eukaryotic osmotrophs in this deep-water community context has not been addressed. We reconstructed flow-velocity profiles and vertical mixing using canopy flow models appropriate to the densities of the observed communities. Further modeling of processes at organismal surfaces documents increasing uptake with height in the community as a function of thinning of the diffusive boundary layer with increased velocity. The velocity profile, produced by canopy flow in the community, generates this advantage of upward growth. Alternative models of …
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