Abstract

Although sleep is ubiquitous, its evolutionary purpose remains elusive. Though every species of animal, as well as many plants sleep, theories of its origin are purely physiological, e.g. to conserve energy, make repairs or to consolidate learning. An evolutionary reason for sleep would answer one of biology’s fundamental unanswered questions. When environmental conditions change on a periodic basis (winter/summer, day/night) organisms must somehow confront the change or else be less able to compete in either niche. Seasonal adaptation includes the migration of birds, changes in honeybee physiology and winter abscission in plants. Diurnal adaptation must be more rapid, forcing changes in behavior in addition to physiology. Since organisms must exist in both environments, evolution has created a way to force a change in behavior, in effect creating “different” organisms (one awake, one asleep) adapted separately to two distinct niches. We sleep to allow evolving into two competing niches. The physiology of sleep forces a change to a different state for the second niche. The physiological needs for sleep are mechanisms that have evolved to achieve this goal.

Highlights

  • It is ‘one of the last great biological mysteries’ [1] that sleep is ubiquitous and essential [2], we have yet to determine its true evolutionary purpose [3]

  • We know a lot about the physiology of sleep, with more being learned every day

  • Proximate causes explore sleep as a process – the physiology of sleep and sleep deprivation, which is the focus of most current research

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Summary

Introduction

It is ‘one of the last great biological mysteries’ [1] that sleep is ubiquitous and essential [2], we have yet to determine its true evolutionary purpose [3]. Since other organisms change in response to that cycle, there are different biological environments that exist between night and day, further enforcing the differences between the two niches. Millions of years before there were animals, plants, or even DNA on the Earth, there were two niches: day and night.

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