Abstract

We have recently discovered a variety of unrelated phototrophic microorganisms (two microalgae and one cyanobacteria) in specialized terrestrial habitats at The Coastal Range of the Atacama Desert. Interestingly, morphological and molecular evidence suggest that these three species are all recent colonists that came from aquatic habitats. The first case is Cyanidiales inhabiting coastal caves. Cyanidiales are microalgae that are commonly found in warm acid springs, but have also been recently discovered as cave flora in Italy. The case is Dunaliella biofilms colonizing spider webs in coastal caves; Dunaliella are microalgae typically found in hypersaline habitats. The third case is Chroococcidiopsis, a genus of Cyanobacteria commonly found in deserts around the world that has also been described in warm springs. Thus, we show that the traits found in the closest ancestors of the aforementioned species (which inhabited other unrelated extreme environments) seem to be now useful for the described species in their current subaerial habitats and may likely correspond to cases of exaptations. Altogether, the Coastal Range of the Atacama Desert may be considered as a place where key steps on the colonization of land by phototrophic organisms seem to be being repeated by convergent evolution of extant microalgae and Cyanobacteria.

Highlights

  • Convergent evolution of similar phenotypic characteristics in unrelated phylogenetic lineages present in comparable environments has been considered by many as evidence of adaptation. (Conway Morris, 2003)

  • We have recently discovered a variety of unrelated phototrophic microorganisms in specialized terrestrial habitats at The Coastal Range of the Atacama Desert

  • Along with other researchers of the field, we hold the view that convergent evolution is a portentous example of how natural selection generates the most advantageous solutions to biological problems repetitively presented by the environment

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Convergent evolution of similar phenotypic characteristics in unrelated phylogenetic lineages present in comparable environments has been considered by many as evidence of adaptation. (Conway Morris, 2003). An adaptation is a trait that evolves due to natural selection in a given environment, whereas an exaptation event provides enhanced fitness in this same environment, but did not initially evolve in response to natural selection in that particular environment (Gould and Vrba, 1982; Losos, 2011). ABOUT THE ATACAMA COASTAL RANGE The Atacama Desert, located in northern Chile, is well known as the driest and oldest desert on Earth It has experienced aridity for the past 150 million years and hyperaridy for the last 15 million years (Houston and Hartley, 2003; Hartley et al, 2005).

Convergent evolution in extreme environments
Findings
Internal pH of the obligate acidophile Cyanidium caldarium
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